Lionello-DeNolf, K. M., & Urcuioli, P. J. (2002).
Stimulus control topographies and tests of symmetry in pigeons.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
78, 467-495.
Pigeons were tested for symmetry after A-B training under
conditions designed to avoid problems that may prevent its
emergence, namely the change of stimulus location in testing
relative to training and the lack of requisite discrimination
training. In Experiment 1, samples appeared in two locations
during baseline training to minimize the impact of stimulus
location. Experiments 2 and 3 included multiple-location training
along with additional identity and symbolic matching training,
respectively, to explicitly train all of the simultaneous and
successive stimulus discriminations required for testing.
Experiment 4 provided reinforcement for symmetrical matching
relations with some stimulus sets (with multiple-location
training) prior to symmetry testing with different sets. In all
experiments, pigeons showed no evidence of symmetry despite the
fact that baseline (A-B) matching transferred to novel locations.
Additional tests for reflexivity (Experiment 2) yielded similar
outcomes. These results indicate that the change in stimulus
location is not the sole reason that pigeons do not show symmetry
and increase the plausibility of arguments that symmetry and
other indexes of stimulus equivalence may be beyond the
capabilities of the pigeon.
Key words: symmetry, stimulus equivalence, matching to sample,
stimulus location, key peck, pigeons