Quantity discrimination by zebrafish (Danio rerio).
Journal of Comparative Psychology, 2015•psycnet.apa.org
Discrimination of quantity (magnitude) was investigated in zebrafish (Danio rerio). Male
zebrafish chose to approach the location previously occupied by the larger in number
between 2 groups of female conspecifics (no longer visible at test) in sets of 1 versus 2
items, and 2 versus 3 items, but failed at 3 versus 4 items; similarly, when tested with larger
numbers, zebrafish succeeded with 2 versus 4, 4 versus 6, and 4 versus 8 items, but failed
with 6 versus 8 items. The results suggest that zebrafish rely on an approximate number …
zebrafish chose to approach the location previously occupied by the larger in number
between 2 groups of female conspecifics (no longer visible at test) in sets of 1 versus 2
items, and 2 versus 3 items, but failed at 3 versus 4 items; similarly, when tested with larger
numbers, zebrafish succeeded with 2 versus 4, 4 versus 6, and 4 versus 8 items, but failed
with 6 versus 8 items. The results suggest that zebrafish rely on an approximate number …
Abstract
Discrimination of quantity (magnitude) was investigated in zebrafish (Danio rerio). Male zebrafish chose to approach the location previously occupied by the larger in number between 2 groups of female conspecifics (no longer visible at test) in sets of 1 versus 2 items, and 2 versus 3 items, but failed at 3 versus 4 items; similarly, when tested with larger numbers, zebrafish succeeded with 2 versus 4, 4 versus 6, and 4 versus 8 items, but failed with 6 versus 8 items. The results suggest that zebrafish rely on an approximate number system to discriminate memorized sets of conspecifics of different magnitudes, the degree of precision in recall being mainly dependent on the ratio between the sets to be discriminated.(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
American Psychological Association
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果