Study Replication: Shape Discrimination in a Conditioning Procedure on the Jumping Spider Phidippus regius

Author:

Mannino Eleonora1ORCID,Regolin Lucia1ORCID,Moretto Enzo23,De Agrò Massimo24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Psychology, University of Padua, 35122 Padua, Italy

2. Esapolis’ Living Insects Museum of the Padua Province, 35143 Padua, Italy

3. Butterfly Arc Ltd., 35036 Padua, Italy

4. The BioRobotics Institute, Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, 56025 Pontedera, Italy

Abstract

Spiders possess a unique visual system, split into eight different eyes and divided into two fully independent visual pathways. This peculiar organization begs the question of how visual information is processed, and whether the classically recognized Gestalt rules of perception hold true. In a previous experiment, we tested the ability of jumping spiders to associate a geometrical shape with a reward (sucrose solution), and then to generalize the learned association to a partially occluded version of the shape. The occluded shape was presented together with a broken version of the same shape. The former should be perceived as a whole shape only in the case the animals, like humans, are able to amodally complete an object partly hidden by an occluder; otherwise, the two shapes would be perceived as identical. There, the spiders learned the association but failed to generalize. Here, we present a replication of the experiment, with an increased number of subjects, a DeepLabCut-based scoring procedure, and an improved statistical analysis. The results of the experiment follow closely the direction of the effects observed in the previous work but fail to rise to significance. We discuss the importance of study replication, and we especially highlight the use of automated scoring procedures to maximize objectivity in behavioral studies.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference67 articles.

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2. An Early History of the Gestalt Factors of Organisation;Vezzani;Perception,2012

3. Laws of Organization in Perceptual Forms;Wertheimer;Psycol. Forsch.,1923

4. Kanizsa, G. (1979). Organization in Vision: Essays on Gestalt Perception, Praeger.

5. Michotte, A. (1963). The Perception of Causality, Basic Books.

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