Back to Search Start Over

All 'chick-a-dee' calls are not created equally. Part I. Open-ended categorization of chick-a-dee calls by sympatric and allopatric chickadees

Authors :
Laurie L, Bloomfield
Christopher B, Sturdy
Source :
Behavioural processes. 77(1)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Researchers trained 24 black-capped (Poecile atricapillus) and 12 mountain (P. gambeli) chickadees in an operant conditioning task to determine if they use open-ended categorization to classify "chick-a-dee" calls, and whether black-capped chickadees that had experience with mountain chick-a-dee calls (sympatric group) would perform this task differently than inexperienced black-capped chickadees (allopatric group). All experimental birds learned to discriminate between species' call categories faster than within a category (Experiment 1), and subsequently classified novel and original between-category chick-a-dee calls in Experiments 2 and 3 following a change in the category contingency. These results suggest that regardless of previous experience, black-capped and mountain chickadees classify their own and the other species' calls into two distinct, yet open-ended, species-level categories.

Details

ISSN :
03766357
Volume :
77
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behavioural processes
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........4d74d347242a6eb8d430312dabaeb4de