Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan
2. Japan Society of Promotion for Sciences, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract
The dextrous foraging skills of primates, including humans, are underpinned by flexible vision-guided control of the arms/hands and even tools as body-part extensions. This capacity involves a visuomotor conversion process that transfers the locations of the hands/arms and a target in retinal coordinates into body coordinates to generate a reaching/grasping movement and to correct online. Similar capacities have evolved in birds, such as tool use in corvids and finches, which represents the flexible motor control of extended body parts. However, the flexibility of avian head-reaching and bill-grasping with body-part extensions remains poorly understood. This study comparatively investigated the flexibility of pecking with an artificially extended bill in crows and pigeons. Pecking performance and kinematics were examined when the bill extension was attached, and after its removal. The bill extension deteriorated pecking in pigeons in both performance and kinematics over 10 days. After the bill removal, pigeons started bill-grasping earlier, indicating motor adaptation to the bill extension. Contrastingly, pecking in crows was deteriorated transiently with the bill extension, but was recovered by adjusting pecking at closer distances, suggesting a quick adjustment to the bill extension. These results indicate flexible visuomotor control to extended body parts in crows but not in pigeons.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Cited by
13 articles.
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1. Visual guidance fine-tunes probing movements of an insect appendage;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2024-01-29
2. 行動とは何か;Japanese Journal of Animal Psychology;2023
3. Tool-use Behavior in Birds: A Hint for Understanding of the Body-mind Relationship from an Evolutionary Viewpoint;Journal of the Robotics Society of Japan;2022
4. Unihemispheric evidence accumulation in pigeons.;Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition;2021-07
5. Object manipulation without hands;Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2021-03-17