Open-ended categorization of chick-a-dee calls by black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapilla)

J Comp Psychol. 2003 Sep;117(3):290-301. doi: 10.1037/0735-7036.117.3.290.

Abstract

The authors trained black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapilla) in an operant discrimination with exemplars of black-capped and Carolina chick-a-dee calls, with the goal of determining whether the birds memorized the calls of conspecifics and heterospecifics or classified the calls by species. Black-capped calls served as both rewarded (S+) and unrewarded (S-) stimuli (the within-category discrimination), whereas Carolina chick-a-dee calls served as S-s (the between-category discrimination) in the black-capped chick-a-dee call S+ group. The Carolina call S+ group had Carolina calls as S+s and S-s (within-category) and black-capped calls as S-s (between-category). Both groups discriminated between call categories faster than within a call category. In 2 subsequent experiments, both S+ groups showed transfer to novel calls and propagation back to between-category calls. The results favor the hypothesis that the acoustically similar social calls of the 2 species constitute separate open-ended categories.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animal Communication*
  • Animals
  • Auditory Perception*
  • Conditioning, Operant
  • Discrimination Learning
  • Female
  • Fourier Analysis
  • Male
  • Mental Recall
  • Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Songbirds*
  • Sound Spectrography*
  • Species Specificity
  • Transfer, Psychology*
  • Vocalization, Animal*