Abstract

In Experiments 1–3 chicks were trained to find, using both eyes, food covered by a cap, using wide-angle search so as to involve lateral and frontal visual fields, with either local or positional cues, or both, identifying the baited site. At test they used right, left or both eyes (RE, LE, Bin). When both types of cue were relevant, LE made greater use of positional cues than the other two groups, as has been previously found, whereas RE made greater use of local (colour) cues. However, when only one type of cue was relevant, RE and LE were equally able to use positional or local cues. Right/left differences emerge when RE and LE can be used in different ways during training. In Experiments 4–5 Bin chicks were shown to turn preferentially to the right during wide-angle search, when relying on local, and to the left when relying on positional cues. In search, parallel processing of RE and LE inputs appears to allow competition which is usually won by the eye system more suited to the task, which then initiates targeting to objects which are visible to its eye.

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