Michael F BrownVillanova University | Nova · Department of Psychology
Michael F Brown
PhD
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76
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Introduction
Skills and Expertise
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January 1980 - December 1985
September 1985 - present
Education
August 1980 - August 1985
Publications
Publications (76)
While the unique hunting behavior of archerfish has received considerable scientific attention, the specific social cues that govern behaviors like intraspecific kleptoparasitism in the species are less understood. This paper asks whether the use of a robotic facsimile representing an archerfish can elicit a social response if it approximates an ar...
Helping behavior tasks are proposed to assess prosocial or “empathic” behavior in rodents. This paradigm characterizes the behavior of subject animals presented with the opportunity to release a conspecific from a distressing situation. Previous studies found a preference in rats for releasing restrained or distressed conspecifics over other contro...
Empirical work related to abstract concepts in honey bee and bumble bee discrimination performance is reviewed. Experiments showing behavioral transfer of numerosity discrimination, relational learning, and same/different discrimination are described. In each case, the attribution of such results to abstract conceptual representations is consistent...
‘Helping behavior’ tasks are proposed to assess prosocial or ‘empathic’ behavior in rodents. This paradigm characterizes the behavior of subject animals presented with the opportunity to release a conspecific from a distressing situation. Previous studies found a preference in rats for releasing restrained or distressed conspecifics over other cont...
Rats searched for food in a situation that allowed them to determine which locations contained food after searching a small number of them, but not which of the baited locations contained more-preferred food rather than a less-preferred food. During some experimental trials, the latter information was available from the choices of model rats making...
This commentary endorses Cheng's message that situated cognition should be considered more broadly in the field of comparative cognition and that our understanding of situated cognition would profit from a comparative perspective. Additional phenomena that can be framed in terms of distributed cognition are identified. Hybrid machine-animal intelli...
Yu et al. (2016) demonstrated that algorithms designed to find efficient routes in standard mazes can be integrated with the natural processes controlling rat navigation and spatial choices, and they pointed out the promise of such "cyborg intelligence" for biorobotic applications. Here, we briefly describe Yu et al.'s work, explore its relevance t...
A computerized task could be completed by predicting the location of a moving target or by choosing several stationary targets. In a fitness-relevant condition, this task was presented to participants in terms of hunting and gathering food necessary for survival. In four experiments, there was no evidence that male and female participants differed...
Three experiments examined the conditions under which the spatial choices of rats searching for food are influenced by the choices made by other rats. Model rats learned a consistent set of baited locations in a 5 × 5 matrix of locations, some of which contained food. In Experiment 1, subject rats could determine the baited locations after choosing...
Human participants searched in a dynamic three-dimensional computer-generated virtual-environment open-field search task for four hidden goal locations arranged in a diamond configuration located in a 5 × 5 matrix of raised bins. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups: visual pattern or visual random. All participants experienced...
Bumblebees were exposed to a discrimination procedure in which reinforcement was contingent on choice of one of two spatial locations. The correct choice depended on whether a stimulus display contained two identical stimuli or two different stimuli. Some bees were trained with color stimuli and tested with line grating stimuli and others with the...
Rats searched for food hidden on top of poles in a 4 × 4 matrix of poles. Before each trial, the location of the four baited
poles was unpredictable. However, the poles were always baited in one of two spatial patterns, either a square or a line.
The food hidden on the four baited poles was one of two types, and the food type determined the identit...
It seems clear that objects and events in the world are related to each other in systematic ways. The nervous system appears to have evolved mechanisms that allow these relationships to be detected and used in adaptive ways. In this context, the study of learning can be understood as the study of these mechanisms that allow the systematicity in the...
Objects, events, and places in the world are related to each other in systematic ways. As a result, mechanisms and processes in the nervous system have evolved that allow these relationships to be detected and used in adaptive ways. In this context, the study of learning can be understood as the study of the mechanisms that allow systematicity in t...
Pairs of rats foraged in trials either together or separately in an open field apparatus for pellets hidden in discreet locations in a 5×5 matrix. Trial duration was either 1 or 4min. The tendency to choose locations that had earlier been visited by another rat was examined by comparing the choices made in the presence and absence of the other rat....
Although there is abundant evidence for social learning and other forms of social influence on behavior, relatively little experimental analysis of the mechanisms involved is available. The present paper reviews a line of research examining so-cial influences on spatial choice in the context of spatial working memory paradigms using pairs of labora...
Human participants learned to choose eight correct locations in a 4 × 4 matrix on a computer display. The locations were arranged either in a structured spatial pattern or an unstructured but consistent spatial arrangement. When the assignment of correct and incorrect locations was reversed after initial learning, participants in the spatial patter...
Social memory was investigated in the context of a spatial working memory task. Pairs of rats were tested in an eight-arm radial maze. Under most conditions, there was a tendency to choose maze locations that had been visited earlier by the other rat. The possibility that this tendency is produced by common preferences for particular maze locations...
Spatial pattern learning permits the learning of the location of objects in space relative to each other without reference to discrete visual landmarks or environmental geometry. In the present experiment, we investigated conditions that facilitate spatial pattern learning. Specifically, human participants searched in a real environment or interact...
Human participants searched in a real environment or interactive 3-D virtual environment open field for four hidden goal locations arranged in a 2 x 2 square configuration in a 5 x 5 matrix of raised bins. The participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups: cues + pattern or pattern only. The participants experienced a training phase, fol...
In two experiments using a radial-arm maze, pairs of rats made choices among eight maze locations, each containing a large quantity of one of two food types. The choices made by 1 rat affected the choices made by the other rat. Under most conditions, visits by 1 rat increased the tendency of the other rat to subsequently choose that maze location....
Pairs of rats were tested in a radial-arm maze to determine whether the spatial choices made by one rat affect the subsequent spatial choices of the other rat. In a free-choice procedure, rats showed an increased tendency to choose the location that had most recently been chosen by a foraging partner but a decreased tendency to visit locations that...
Rats experienced a spatial pattern of baited and unbaited arms in an eight-arm radial maze. The spatial pattern remained constant over trials, but the spatial locations that were baited varied unpredictably. Although there was no evidence of control by the spatial pattern during free choice training trials, the rats' ability to locate baited arms i...
Today, the scope and depth of research on spatial navigation and spatial memory is expansive, with work being done on natural behavior in the field, laboratory experiments intended to elucidate general principles, refined quantitative models of spatial behavior, and a variety of research on the neurophysiological mechanisms of spatial cognition. Wo...
Choices can be controlled by a spatial pattern among goal locations that does not correspond to any perceptual cues. The relationship between this form of spatial learning and other, more well understood, forms of spatial learning is described. The evidence for spatial pattern learning is reviewed and some possible mechanisms are discussed.
This c...
Rats obtained food from the tops of vertical poles in a 5 x 5 matrix of locations. On each trial, the baited locations formed one of the two possible exemplars of a checkerboard spatial pattern. During training, locations that had been visited earlier in the trial were indicated by a visual cue. Following training, performance with and without the...
Five pigeons matched element and compound samples in a symbolic matching-to-sample procedure. In Experiment 1, the sample duration varied within each session, ranging from.125 to 8 sec. Element matching accuracy was superior to compound matching accuracy, and matching accuracy improved with sample duration; but there was no evidence for the converg...
Rats learn the spatial pattern in which hidden caches of food are located. Once the pattern is learned, finding one or more baited locations provides (positive) information about the remaining baited locations. In the present experiment, we examined whether negative information (the absence of food in a location) would also be used in locating the...
Two experiments were conducted to examine the effects of redundant and relevant visual cues on spatial pattern learning. Rats searched for hidden food items on the tops of poles that formed a square (Experiment 1) or a checkerboard (Experiment 2) pattern. The experimental groups were trained with visual cues that specified the locations of the bait...
This paper describes a series of behavioral experiments that were conducted to test a new concept using rats to detect contraband odors, such as explosives, drugs, or prohibited foodstuffs. Under this concept, the trained alerting behavior of rats is remotely monitored by humans and/or computers to determine when the animals detect a scent of inter...
Rats searched in a matrix of vertical poles for food hidden on top of the poles. The only information available about the location of the food was the consistent spatial pattern of the baited poles, which was a checkerboard. This spatial pattern of hidden-food locations came to control the choices of poles made by the rats. The experiments ruled ou...
Rats searched in a matrix of vertical poles for food hidden on top of the poles. The only information available about the location of the food was the consistent spatial pattern of the baited poles, which was a checkerboard. This spatial pattern of hidden-food locations came to control the choices of poles made by the rats. The experiments ruled ou...
Male and female rats searched in a 5 x 5 matrix of 15.5-cm-tall wooden poles for reward pellets hidden on top of the poles. The baited poles always formed a square pattern, but were otherwise unpredictable. Measures developed by Brown and Terrinoni (1996) were used to determine choice efficiency and the extent to which choices were determined by th...
A series of computer programs is described that allows beginning psychology students to design, conduct, analyze, and interpret virtual (computer-simulated) psychological studies. This technique allows the instructor more control over the outcome of student experiments, increases the scope of experiments that can be done by students, decreases the...
A series of computer programs is described that allows beginning psychology students to design, conduct, analyze, and interpret
virtual (computer-simulated) psychological studies. This technique allows the instructor more control over the outcome of
student experiments, increases the scope of experiments that can be done by students, decreases the...
The performance in a radial-arm maze of two groups of rats with restricted access to extra-maze visual cues was studied. One group received extensive exposure to the visual environment of the maze, whereas the second group was never exposed to the environment, aside from their experience in the maze itself. Spatial exposure resulted in a slightly i...
Honeybees were tested in delayed conditional discrimination procedures (matching-to-sample and nonmatching-to-sample), using
color stimuli presented on a video monitor. A small but reliable tendency to choose the color presented as the conditional
cue was found, regardless of whether the contingencies reinforced or discouraged this tendency. The pe...
Honeybees foraged from six locations, each of which was baited with sugar solution prior to each experimental trial. Under
a variety of conditions, bees exhibited a small but reliable tendency to avoid revisits to locations that they had visited
earlier during the experimental trial. These results replicate those of Brown and Demas (1994), who conc...
Rats were tested in a specially constructed radial-arm maze that eliminated access to extramaze visual cues and allowed any
effects of intramaze cues to be controlled. Despite this, choice accuracy was controlled by the spatial location of previously
visited arms. Part of this control was attributed to vestibular or kinesthetic cues. This conclusio...
The cognitive mechanisms involved in spatial choice when access to visual cues is restricted were examined in three experiments
using male rats. A specially constructed radial-arm maze was used, in which extramaze visual cues could not be perceived from
the central arena, but could be perceived from the maze arms. Choices were very accurate when th...
Rats gathered pellets from the tops of 15.5-cm-tall poles. In a matrix of poles, bait was located on the tops of poles arranged in either a square (Experiment 1) or linear (Experiment 2) configuration. The specific locations of baited poles varied unpredictably from trial to trial. The data show that the rats' choices were controlled by the spatial...
The ability of honey bees, Apis mellifera, to avoid returns to locations recently depleted of sugar solution (win-shift) or to return to locations recently depleted of sugar solution (win-stay) was tested. Bees collected sugar solution from a small matrix of six cells. During each of a series of trials, they first visited a randomly determined set...
Spatial working memory (the ability to represent multiple locations in a flexible, dynamic manner) has been studied in a range of vertebrate species. The results of 3 experiments indicate that this ability also exists in at least one invertebrate (honeybees; Apis mellifera). Individual honeybees collected sugar solution from a matrix of 6 locations...
Spatial working memory (the ability to represent multiple locations in a flexible, dynamic manner) has been studied in a range of vertebrate species. The results of 3 experiments indicate that this ability also exists in at least one invertebrate (honeybees; Apis mellifera). Individual honeybees collected sugar solution from a matrix of 6 locations...
In 6 experiments, the performance of male rats in a 12-arm radial maze was examined. The focus of study was the extent to which the spatial location of individual baited maze arms was determined before the rat was exposed to the extramaze visual cues corresponding to the arm, and thereby guided the rat toward the location of baited arms. Such spati...
Male rats were tested in a 12-arm radial maze with 6 arms that were standard in length and 6 arms that were half the standard
length. As previously reported by Brown (1990), revisits to short arms were more likely than revisits to long arms. Two explanations
of this effect of mazearm length on choice accuracy were experimentally contrasted. The fir...
Male rats were tested in a radial-arm maze in which the maze-arms differed in terms of surface brightness (black vs white) and incline (flat vs inclined such that the end of the arm was elevated). Errors were more likely to black arms than to white arms and to flat arms than to inclined arms. Application of signal detection theory to the go/no-go d...
Three matching-to-sample experiments examined whether spatial or configural factors determined how the element arrangement
of compound sample stimuli influenced matching accuracy in pigeons. Seven types of compound stimuli were tested. The arrangement
of color and line-orientation elements in these compounds varied in terms of the spatial separatio...
Fifteen rats performed in a standard radial-arm maze task (Experiment 1) and in a modified task with a set of forced choices and a 15-min retention interval prior to completion of the maze (Experiment 2). In addition to the standard measure of choice in the radial-arm maze, orientation toward arms was measured and considered to constitute go-no-go...
Five pigeons matched element and compound samples in a symbolic matching4o~sampie proce- dure. In Experiment 1, the sample duration varied within each session, rangingfrom .125 to 8 sec. Element matching accuracy was superior to compound matching accuracy, and matching accuracy improved with sample duration; but there was no evidence for the conver...
Pigeons were trained to match color and line orientation element or compound samples in a symbolic matching-to-sample task. In subsequent test sessions with element and compound samples, there was an initial superiority of element matching for the element-trained group and of compound matching for the compound-trained group. This difference persist...
Rats trained in a 16-arm radial maze with arms half the standard length demonstrated extremely low, but above chance, choice
accuracy (Experiment 1). Rats trained in a 12-arm maze with short arms demonstrated a substantially higher degree of adjacent-arm
responding than did rats trained in the same maze with long maze arms and, when response stereo...
The touch screen system has been employed as a device for the measurement of responses and presentation of stimuli in pigeon
laboratories for 4 years. Its contributions to the study of the pigeon’s behavior include the addition of response location
information and an increase in the versatility of stimulus presentation. Along with the advantages of...
Rats were trained in a standard 12-arm radial maze task. Following training, each trial consisted of a sequence of 2, 4, 6,
8, or 10 choices, followed by a 15-min delay, which then was followed by a choice between a single arm and a response manipulandum
mounted in the center of the maze. An arm visit was reinforced if the arm had not been visited...
Used a matching-to-sample (MTS) procedure to investigate short-term memory for compound visual stimuli in 10 mixed-breed pigeons. In Exp I, a symbolic MTS procedure was used. Three Ss were trained to match element samples, and 3 were trained to match compound samples. Findings indicate that the compound-trained group did not learn to match the comp...
The behavior of rats while solving a 12-arm radial maze was investigated using measures of response bias, choice latencies, and behavioral organization. Response bias decreased as a function of choice number, while the amount of time spent on the center platform between choices increased substantially during the last few choices. This increase in t...
Four experiments investigated the content of the memory used by rats in mediating retention intervals interpolated during performance in a 12-arm radial maze. The delay occurred following either the 2nd, 4th, 6th, 8th, or 10th choice. A 15-min delay had the greatest disruptive effect when interpolated in the middle of the choice sequence and less o...
The conditions necessary for producing retroactive interference (RI) were examined in a 12-arm radial maze. Rats were first
given either three or nine forced choices in a to-be-remembered maze. During a 2-h delay, they received one or two trials
in a second 12-arm maze, located either in a different room or the same room as the to-be-remembered maz...
Pigeons’ pecks to the two elements of spatially separated compound samples were observed during matching-to-sample performance.
An attentional biasing procedure was used in which the birds were tested on a subset of the information contained in the sample
(either one of the two dimensions or one of the two sample key locations) for a large number o...