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Dive into the research topics where Sota Watanabe is active.

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Featured researches published by Sota Watanabe.


Animal Cognition | 2011

Do birds (pigeons and bantams) know how confident they are of their perceptual decisions

Noriyuki Nakamura; Sota Watanabe; Toru Betsuyaku; Kazuo Fujita

Rhesus monkeys are known to recognize confidence about their immediate perceptual and cognitive decisions by using a betting procedure (Son and Kornell in The missing link in cognition: origins of self-reflective consciousness. Oxford University Press, New York, pp 296–320, 2005; Kornell et al. in Psychol Sci 18:64–71, 2007). In this report, we examined whether this ability is shared in two avian species (pigeons and bantams) in order to know how widespread this metacognitive ability is among animals. We trained pigeons and bantams to search for a differently colored disk (target) among others (distracters) displayed on a touch-sensitive monitor. In test, the subjects were required to choose one of two confidence icons, “risk” and “safe”, after the visual search. A peck at the “risk” icon after a correct response in the visual search (i.e., a peck at the target) was reinforced by food and light, while that after an incorrect response (i.e., a peck at a distracter) resulted in a timeout. A peck at the “safe” icon was always reinforced by food and light, or by light only, regardless of the visual search result. The percentages of “safe” choices after incorrect responses were higher than after correct responses in all six pigeons and two of three bantams. This behavior generalized to novel stimuli in some subjects, and even to a novel line-classification task in a pigeon. These results suggest that these two distantly related avian species have in common a metacognitive ability that allows them to recognize confidence about their immediate perceptual decisions.


Animal Cognition | 2014

A reversed Ebbinghaus-Titchener illusion in bantams (Gallus gallus domesticus).

Noriyuki Nakamura; Sota Watanabe; Kazuo Fujita

AbstractA disk surrounded by smaller disks looks larger, and one surrounded by larger disks looks smaller than reality. This visual illusion, called the Ebbinghaus–Titchener illusion, remains one of the strongest and most robust illusions induced by contrast with the surrounding stimuli in humans. In the present study, we asked whether bantams would perceive this illusion. We trained three bantams to classify six diameters of target disks surrounded by inducer disks of a constant diameter into “small” or “large”. In the test that followed, the diameters of the inducer disks were systematically changed. The results showed that the Ebbinghaus–Titchener figures also induce a strong illusion in bantams, but in the other direction, that is, bantams perceive a target disk surrounded by smaller disks to be smaller than it really is and vice versa. Possible confounding factors, such as the gap between target disk and inducer disks and the weighted sum of surface of these figural elements, could not account for the subjects’ biased responses. Taken together with the pigeon study by Nakamura et al. (J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process 34:375–387 2008), these results show that bantams as well as pigeons perceive an illusion induced by assimilation effects, not by contrast ones, for the Ebbinghaus–Titchener types of illusory figures. Perhaps perceptual processes underlying such illusory perception (i.e., lack of contrast effects) shown in bantams and pigeons may be partly shared among other avian species.


Animal Cognition | 2013

Bantams (Gallus gallus domesticus) also perceive a reversed Zöllner illusion

Sota Watanabe; Noriyuki Nakamura; Kazuo Fujita

Although pigeons have been shown to be susceptible to several size and length illusions, other avian species have not been tested intensively for illusory perception. Here we report how bantams perceive the Zöllner figure, in which parallel lines look nonparallel due to short crosshatches superimposed on the lines. Watanabe et al. (Cognition 119:137–141, 2011) showed that pigeons, like humans, perceived parallel lines as nonparallel but that the orientation of subjective convergence was opposite to that of humans. We trained three bantams to peck at the narrower (or wider) of the two gaps at the end of a pair of nonparallel lines. After adapting them to target lines with randomly oriented crosshatches (which result in no apparent illusion to humans), we tested the bantams’ responses on randomly inserted probe trials, in which crosshatches that should induce the standard Zöllner-like illusion for humans replaced the randomly oriented ones. The results suggested bantams, like pigeons, perceive a reversed Zöllner illusion.


Animal Cognition | 2013

Do pigeons (Columba livia) seek information when they have insufficient knowledge

Sumie Iwasaki; Sota Watanabe; Kazuo Fujita

AbstractsSeeking information in uncertain situations has been interpreted as evidence of metacognitive abilities. We examined whether pigeons could monitor their own knowledge states and seek new information when in need. In Experiment 1, we required the pigeons to learn novel sequences of responses for various trios of illustrations. On half of the trials, subjects were given the opportunity to ask for “hints” as to the next correct response in a sequence. If the subjects completed a trial correctly without any hints, they were rewarded with food and light. If the subjects sought one or more hints during the course of completing a trial correctly, they were rewarded either with food and light, or with light only. Incorrect responses resulted in a time-out. We analyzed when the pigeons sought hints. Two of four pigeons sought hints in early sessions more often than in the final sessions of learning novel sequences, and the frequency of hint-seeking was inversely correlated with accuracy on those trials in which hints were unavailable. In Experiment 2, however, the pigeons failed to generalize their “hint-seeking” behavior in a novel situation involving visual search as the primary task. In sum, the results suggest that this species might have an ability to differentiate between their own cognitive states of knowing and not knowing, although the evidence is inconclusive.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes | 2008

Pigeons perceive the Ebbinghaus-Titchener circles as an assimilation illusion.

Noriyuki Nakamura; Sota Watanabe; Kazuo Fujita


Cognition | 2011

Pigeons perceive a reversed Zollner illusion

Sota Watanabe; Noriyuki Nakamura; Kazuo Fujita


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 2009

Further Analysis of Perception of Reversed Müller-Lyer Figures for Pigeons (Columba Livia)

Noriyuki Nakamura; Sota Watanabe; Kazuo Fujita


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 2010

Do bantams (Gallus gallus domesticus) experience amodal completion? An analysis of visual search performance.

Noriyuki Nakamura; Sota Watanabe; Toru Betsuyaku; Kazuo Fujita


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 2009

Further analysis of perception of the standard Müller-Lyer figures in pigeons (Columba livia) and humans (Homo sapiens): effects of length of brackets.

Noriyuki Nakamura; Sota Watanabe; Kazuo Fujita


Archive | 2012

Amodal Completion and Illusory Perception in Birds and Primates

Kazuo Fujita; Noriyuki Nakamura; Ayumi Sakai; Sota Watanabe; Tomokazu Ushitani

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Masaki Tomonaga

Primate Research Institute

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