It has been reported that when disoriented in a novel environment, rats and young children reorient themselves in accord with the large-scale shape of the environment, but not in accord with non-geometric properties of the environment such as the colour of a wall or the pattern of a distinct featural panel placed in a corner. In contrast to young children and mature rats, human adults conjoin geometric and non-geometric information. It has been suggested that language could be necessary to human beings for combining geometric and non-geometric information We tested fish (Xenotoca eiseni) in a rectangular environment constructed to eliminate external orientation cues. Ways to escapes from the environment were located in some corners that fish had to find out. When tested in an all-white tank, fish proved able to reorient themselves using purely geometric information: in accord with the shape of the environment, they searched the correct and the rotationally equivalent corners equally often. On the other hand, when tested in a tank with one blue wall, fish searched only at the correct corner thus demonstrating that they also encoded non-geometric information. Moreover, when trained with four distinct panels located at the corners, and the tested in the absence of the panels, fish chose the two geometrically correct corners, thus indicating that they encode geometric information even when featural information alone would suffice for orientation. These results suggest that spatial orientation by a "geometric module" is a phylogenetic ancient tract in vertebrates and that the ability to conjoin geometric and non-geometric information is not unique to the human species and could be achieved in species that lack any ability for verbal language.
The geometric module of fish / Sovrano, V. A.; Bisazza, A.; Vallortigara, G.. - In: REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY. - ISSN 1330-6812. - STAMPA. - (2002), pp. 107-107. (Intervento presentato al convegno 6th Alpe-Adria Congress of Psychology tenutosi a Rovereto nel 3rd-5th October 2002).
The geometric module of fish
SOVRANO V. A.
Primo
;Vallortigara G.Ultimo
2002-01-01
Abstract
It has been reported that when disoriented in a novel environment, rats and young children reorient themselves in accord with the large-scale shape of the environment, but not in accord with non-geometric properties of the environment such as the colour of a wall or the pattern of a distinct featural panel placed in a corner. In contrast to young children and mature rats, human adults conjoin geometric and non-geometric information. It has been suggested that language could be necessary to human beings for combining geometric and non-geometric information We tested fish (Xenotoca eiseni) in a rectangular environment constructed to eliminate external orientation cues. Ways to escapes from the environment were located in some corners that fish had to find out. When tested in an all-white tank, fish proved able to reorient themselves using purely geometric information: in accord with the shape of the environment, they searched the correct and the rotationally equivalent corners equally often. On the other hand, when tested in a tank with one blue wall, fish searched only at the correct corner thus demonstrating that they also encoded non-geometric information. Moreover, when trained with four distinct panels located at the corners, and the tested in the absence of the panels, fish chose the two geometrically correct corners, thus indicating that they encode geometric information even when featural information alone would suffice for orientation. These results suggest that spatial orientation by a "geometric module" is a phylogenetic ancient tract in vertebrates and that the ability to conjoin geometric and non-geometric information is not unique to the human species and could be achieved in species that lack any ability for verbal language.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione