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Foster, T.M.; Matthews, L.R.; Temple, W.; Poling, A. |
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Title |
Concurrent schedule performance in domestic goats: persistent undermatching |
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1997 |
Publication |
Behavioural Processes |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Process. |
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40 |
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3 |
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231-237 |
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Matching equation; Undermatching; Variable-interval schedule; Nose-press response; Goats |
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Performance of nine domestic goats responding under concurrent variable-interval variable-interval schedules of food delivery was examined, with results analyzed in terms of the generalized matching equation. Substantial undermatching of response and time allocation ratios to obtained reinforcement ratios was evident. Post-reinforcement pause time ratios approximately matched obtained reinforcement ratios. Subtracting these times from total time allocation values yielded net time allocation ratios, which undermatched obtained reinforcement ratios to a greater degree than whole-session time allocation ratios. Slopes of regression lines relating behavioral outputs to environmental inputs characteristically were below 0.6, which is similar to previous findings in dairy cows tested under comparable conditions. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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3602 |
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Wolff, A.; Hausberger, M.; Le Scolan, N. |
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Title |
Experimental tests to assess emotionality in horses |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
1997 |
Publication |
Behavioural Processes |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Process. |
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40 |
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3 |
Pages |
209-221 |
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Emotivity; Gregariousness; Horse; Neophobia; Open-field |
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Different tests were used to assess different aspects of the emotionality of 1-3 year-old horses: arena test; a [`]novel object' test; and a handling test. In reaction to the test situations no important differences were observed according to age or sex in the behaviour patterns, but clear individual differences were observed within these classes. The arena test seemed to reveal the degree of gregariousness of the animals whereas the results in the two other tests were correlated and seemed to reflect an inherent degree of fearfulness in the horse. Indices were developed that enabled to rank the animals, by taking into account all behaviour patterns shown. Such individual characteristics might have some genetic basis: half-siblings tended to behave the same way in most cases. |
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0376-6357 |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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5018 |
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Le Scolan, N.; Hausberger, M.; Wolff, A. |
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Title |
Stability over situations in temperamental traits of horses as revealed by experimental and scoring approaches |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
1997 |
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Behavioural Processes |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Process. |
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41 |
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3 |
Pages |
257-266 |
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Behavioural tests; Horse; Ratings; Temperament |
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Individual behavioural reactions of adult horses in a variety of experimental tests were compared with ratings by riding teachers. The tests were made in a non working situation, with the animals being released in an arena, a box (arena test, new object test, learning tests) or handled (new object/handling situation). The traits rated by teachers were fearfulness, nervousness, gregariousness and learning abilities at work (ridden or handled). Despite a great homogeneity in the reactions exhibited by the horses in the different situations, large individual differences were present. Correlations appeared between the reactivity in the arena test and the score of gregariousness, between the reactivity in the novel object test and the rating of nervousness when ridden, between the results in the handling test and the rating of general fearfulness and between the ability to memorise an instrumental task and the score of general learning ability. Such results strengthen the idea that there are underlying behavioural dispositions that are stable across situations and that the experimental tests may be good predictors of the temperament in untrained animals. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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3591 |
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Beaugrand, J.P |
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Title |
Relative importance of initial individual differences, agonistic experience, and assessment accuracy during hierarchy formation: a simulation study |
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Year |
1997 |
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Behavioural Processes |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Process. |
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41 |
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177-192 |
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Dominance; Hierarchy formation; RHP; Agonistic experience; Assessment; Self-organization; Simulation |
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This simulation study explores some conditions leading to transitivity within dominance orders. Combinations of three parameters were varied to study their consequences upon hierarchy formation and upon the degree of linearity of resultant structures. The factors studied were: (1) the importance of initial resource holding potentials (RHPs); (2) changes brought in RHPs by successive victories and defeats; and (3) accuracy of RHP assessment made by opponents. Results show that initial differences in RHP always lead to perfectly transitive chains whose rank order reflects the importance of initial differences. Even when simulated animals make important errors while assessing each other during round robin tournaments, emerging dominance structures are perfectly linear and ranks obtained in the structure are highly correlated with initial values in RHPs. Moreover, accumulated experiences of victory and/or defeat alone always lead to perfectly linear hierarchies. Their combination with initial individual differences in RHP led to the same conclusion. Even when assessment was far from being perfect, not only perfect chains were formed but initial values in RHPs significantly influenced rank order when the contribution of victory and defeat to RHP was relatively unimportant. The higher the importance of victory and defeat to RHP as compared to that of initial RHP values, the lower was the correlation between initial RHP values and the ranks order reached by individuals in the resultant hierarchies. In general also, the lower the variation within initial RHPs, the lower was the correlation between initial RHPs and ranks in the hierarchy. At a given level of initial RHP dispersion, increasing the contribution of victory and defeat to RHP diminished the correlation between initial RHP values and obtained ranks. In addition, inaccurate assessment reduced the overall correlation, especially when dispersion of initial RHP values was low and the contribution of victory and defeat relatively unimportant. These results shed some light on the controversy about the respective roles of initial individual attributes and that of patterns of resolution in the formation of animal hierarchies. We present the emergence of social order within closed systems as those simulated here as a case of self-organization. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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4290 |
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Author |
Byrne, T.; Sutphin, G.; Poling, A. |
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Title |
Acquisition, extinction, and reacquisition of responding with delayed and immediate reinforcement |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
1998 |
Publication |
Behavioural Processes |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Process. |
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43 |
Issue |
1 |
Pages |
97-101 |
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Acquisition; Delayed reinforcement; Extinction; Rats |
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The present study investigated acquisition, extinction, and reacquisition of free-operant responding when rats' lever presses produced water after a resetting delay of 0, 10, 20, or 30 s. Results indicated that: (1) responding was acquired rapidly at all delays without shaping or autoshaping; (2) resistance to extinction was directly related to delay length and inversely related to intermittency of reinforcement; (3) responding acquired with delayed reinforcement recovered less rapidly from extinction, and was less efficient, than responding acquired with immediate reinforcement. Comparing these results with those of studies using discrete-trials and free-operant procedures with no reinforcement delay suggest that the specific conditions under which behavior is maintained determines, in part, the behavioral effects of delay and intermittency of reinforcement. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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3601 |
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Author |
Duncan, I.J.H.; Widowski, T.M.; Malleau, A.E.; Lindberg, A.C.; Petherick, J.C. |
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Title |
External factors and causation of dustbathing in domestic hens |
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Journal Article |
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1998 |
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Behavioural Processes |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Process. |
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43 |
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2 |
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219-228 |
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Dustbathing; Illumination; Laying hens; Radiant heat; Social facilitation; Temperature |
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Dustbathing is known to be motivated by complex interactions between internal factors which build up over time and external factors, such as the sight of a dusty substrate. In this study, the effects of other external factors were investigated. Environmental temperature was shown to be important; frequencies of dustbathing were greater when hens were held at 22 than at 10[degree sign]C (P<0.01). In a second experiment, a radiant heat source or a radiant heat+light source, balanced to give the same radiant heat, resulted in more dustbathing behaviour during a 1-h stimulus period than during the same period with no stimulus (P<0.05). Components of dustbathing were increased more by the heat+light stimulus than by the heat stimulus alone (P<0.03). In a third experiment, the amount of dustbathing performed by individual hens in cages with dustbaths was increased by the presence of a group of hens dustbathing in an adjoining pen with a dustbath compared with the amount occurring when the hens were absent from the pen. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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3607 |
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Macuda, T.; Timney, B. |
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Title |
Luminance and chromatic discrimination in the horse (Equus caballus) |
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Journal Article |
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1999 |
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Behavioural Processes |
Abbreviated Journal |
Behav. Process. |
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44 |
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3 |
Pages |
301-307 |
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Colour vision; Chromatic discrimination; Luminance discrimination; Horse |
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Equine colour vision was measured under conditions that minimised the possibility of animals using brightness cues to make chromatic discriminations. In a two-stage study, we first obtained luminance discrimination functions for achromatic targets then tested for chromatic discrimination over a range of target luminances. Horses were trained on a two-choice discrimination task. The positive stimulus was varied in luminance and/or colour using neutral density and broad band colour filters. The negative stimulus appeared as a uniform grey. In the brightness discrimination task, the horses performed well at large luminance differences but their percentage of correct responses declined to near chance levels at differences of less than 0.2 log units. In addition, a decrement in performance was noted at luminance differences of less than 0.2 log units for green and yellow chromatic discrimination functions, suggesting that horses cannot easily discriminate yellow and green from grey. However, the chromatic discrimination functions for red and blue showed that animals performed very well across the full range of target luminances. These results suggest that horses are at least dichromats. |
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refbase @ user @ |
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844 |
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Sutton J.E.; Roberts W.A. |
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Do pigeons show incidental timing? Some experiments and a suggested hierarchical framework for the study of attention in animal cognition |
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1998 |
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Behavioural Processes |
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Behav. Process. |
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44 |
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263-275 |
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3463 |
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Lejeune, H.; Macar, F.; Zakay, D. |
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Attention and timing: dual-task performance in pigeons |
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1999 |
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Behavioural Processes |
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Behav. Process. |
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45 |
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1-3 |
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141-157 |
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Timing; Dual task; Attention; Pigeons |
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Pigeons were exposed to an analog of a `dual-task' procedure used to test attentional models of timing in humans. After separate training on an auditory duration discrimination and on a variable ratio (VR) schedule, VR episodes lasting for 5 s were superimposed on the stimuli to be timed, either early (E) or late (L) during the trial. Trials with VR yielded underestimation of the target durations (increased % of `short' choices), relative to trials without VR, and this effect was stronger under the L than under the E condition. Data were similar to those collected with humans and support attentional models of timing according to which the simultaneous non-timing task uses processing resources which are diverted from the timing mechanisms. |
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Equine Behaviour @ team @ |
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3582 |
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Mercado E.; Killebrew D.A.; Pack A.A.; Macha I.V.B.; Herman L.M. |
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Generalization of 'same-different' classification abilities in bottlenosed dolphins |
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2000 |
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Behavioural Processes |
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Behav. Process. |
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50 |
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79-94 |
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refbase @ user @ |
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