<i>VISUAL SEARCH BY CHIMPANZEES</i> (PAN): <i>ASSESSMENT OF CONTROLLING RELATIONS</i>

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<jats:p>Three experimentally sophisticated chimpanzees (<jats:italic>Pan</jats:italic>), Akira, Chloe, and Ai, were trained on visual search performance using a modified multiple‐alternative matching‐to‐sample task in which a sample stimulus was followed by the search display containing one target identical to the sample and several uniform distractors (i.e., negative comparison stimuli were identical to each other). After they acquired this task, they were tested for transfer of visual search performance to trials in which the sample was not followed by the uniform search display (odd‐item search). Akira showed positive transfer of visual search performance to odd‐item search even when the display size (the number of stimulus items in the search display) was small, whereas Chloe and Ai showed a transfer only when the display size was large. Chloe and Ai used some nonrelational cues such as perceptual isolation of the target among uniform distractors (so‐called pop‐out). In addition to the odd‐item search test, various types of probe trials were presented to clarify the controlling relations in multiple‐alternative matching to sample. Akira showed a decrement of accuracy as a function of the display size when the search display was nonuniform (i.e., each “distractor” stimulus was not the same), whereas Chloe and Ai showed perfect performance. Furthermore, when the sample was identical to the uniform distractors in the search display, Chloe and Ai never selected an odd‐item target, but Akira selected it when the display size was large. These results indicated that Akira's behavior was controlled mainly by relational cues of target—distractor oddity, whereas an identity relation between the sample and the target strongly controlled the performances of Chloe and Ai.</jats:p>

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