THE INFLUENCE OF ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION ON THE PIGEON'S COLOR DISCRIMINATION1
- 1 May 1972
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
- Vol. 17 (3) , 325-337
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jeab.1972.17-325
Abstract
Two experiments demonstrated the pigeon's sensitivity to ultraviolet light. In Experiment I, pigeons' responses were reinforced on a multiple schedule with a variable-interval reinforcement schedule in one component and extinction in the other component. Response rates were quite different in the two components where the 520-nm stimuli signalling each component differed only in that one of them contained a 366-nm ultraviolet component. In Experiment II, pigeons were trained to peck one side key when two halves of a split field were of different wavelength and to peck another side key when they were of the same wavelength. Initially, field halves contained both “visible” and ultraviolet components of energy. Discrimination performance improved when the ultraviolet component was removed from one field half. It was argued that the critical change in the stimulus was a color change, rather than a brightness one, or a fluorescence of structures in the pigeon's eye.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- COLOR‐NAMING FUNCTIONS FOR THE PIGEON1Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1971
- The spectral sensitivity of the pigeon (Columba livia)Vision Research, 1965
- Two Types of ROC Curves and Definitions of ParametersThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1959
- Spectral Sensitivity in the PigeonJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1957
- IODOPSINThe Journal of general physiology, 1955
- The spectral sensitivity of the pigeon's retinal elementsThe Journal of Physiology, 1953
- Human Vision and the SpectrumScience, 1945
- The Photopic Spectrum of the PigeonActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1942