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A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens

Affect-induced cognitive judgement biases occur in both humans and animals. Animals in a more negative affective state tend to interpret ambiguous cues more negatively than animals in a more positive state and vice versa. Investigating animals’ responses to ambiguous cues can therefore be used as a...

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Autores principales: Deakin, Amanda, Browne, William J., Hodge, James J. L., Paul, Elizabeth S., Mendl, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27410229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158222
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author Deakin, Amanda
Browne, William J.
Hodge, James J. L.
Paul, Elizabeth S.
Mendl, Michael
author_facet Deakin, Amanda
Browne, William J.
Hodge, James J. L.
Paul, Elizabeth S.
Mendl, Michael
author_sort Deakin, Amanda
collection PubMed
description Affect-induced cognitive judgement biases occur in both humans and animals. Animals in a more negative affective state tend to interpret ambiguous cues more negatively than animals in a more positive state and vice versa. Investigating animals’ responses to ambiguous cues can therefore be used as a proxy measure of affective state. We investigated laying hens’ responses to ambiguous stimuli using a novel cognitive bias task. In the ‘screen-peck’ task, hens were trained to peck a high/low saturation orange circle presented on a computer screen (positive cue–P) to obtain a mealworm reward, and to not peck when the oppositely saturated orange circle was presented (negative cue–N) to avoid a one second air puff. Ambiguous cues were orange circles of intermediate saturation between the P and N cue (near-positive–NP; middle–M; near-negative–NN), and were unrewarded. Cue pecking showed a clear generalisation curve from P through NP, M, NN to N suggesting that hens were able to associate colour saturation with reward or punishment, and could discriminate between stimuli that were more or less similar to learnt cues. Across six test sessions, there was no evidence for extinction of pecking responses to ambiguous cues. We manipulated affective state by changing temperature during testing to either ~20°C or ~29°C in a repeated measures cross-over design. Hens have been shown to prefer temperatures in the higher range and hence we assumed that exposure to the higher temperature would induce a relatively positive affective state. Hens tested under warmer conditions were significantly more likely to peck the M probe than those tested at cooler temperatures suggesting that increased temperature in the ranges tested here may have some positive effect on hens, inducing a positive cognitive bias.
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spelling pubmed-49436362016-08-01 A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens Deakin, Amanda Browne, William J. Hodge, James J. L. Paul, Elizabeth S. Mendl, Michael PLoS One Research Article Affect-induced cognitive judgement biases occur in both humans and animals. Animals in a more negative affective state tend to interpret ambiguous cues more negatively than animals in a more positive state and vice versa. Investigating animals’ responses to ambiguous cues can therefore be used as a proxy measure of affective state. We investigated laying hens’ responses to ambiguous stimuli using a novel cognitive bias task. In the ‘screen-peck’ task, hens were trained to peck a high/low saturation orange circle presented on a computer screen (positive cue–P) to obtain a mealworm reward, and to not peck when the oppositely saturated orange circle was presented (negative cue–N) to avoid a one second air puff. Ambiguous cues were orange circles of intermediate saturation between the P and N cue (near-positive–NP; middle–M; near-negative–NN), and were unrewarded. Cue pecking showed a clear generalisation curve from P through NP, M, NN to N suggesting that hens were able to associate colour saturation with reward or punishment, and could discriminate between stimuli that were more or less similar to learnt cues. Across six test sessions, there was no evidence for extinction of pecking responses to ambiguous cues. We manipulated affective state by changing temperature during testing to either ~20°C or ~29°C in a repeated measures cross-over design. Hens have been shown to prefer temperatures in the higher range and hence we assumed that exposure to the higher temperature would induce a relatively positive affective state. Hens tested under warmer conditions were significantly more likely to peck the M probe than those tested at cooler temperatures suggesting that increased temperature in the ranges tested here may have some positive effect on hens, inducing a positive cognitive bias. Public Library of Science 2016-07-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4943636/ /pubmed/27410229 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158222 Text en © 2016 Deakin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Deakin, Amanda
Browne, William J.
Hodge, James J. L.
Paul, Elizabeth S.
Mendl, Michael
A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens
title A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens
title_full A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens
title_fullStr A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens
title_full_unstemmed A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens
title_short A Screen-Peck Task for Investigating Cognitive Bias in Laying Hens
title_sort screen-peck task for investigating cognitive bias in laying hens
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4943636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27410229
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158222
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