| Racing Pigeon Intelligence

Pigeons have featured in numerous experiments in
comparative psychology, including experiments concerned with animal
cognition, and as a result we have considerable knowledge of pigeon
intelligence.
Available data show, for example, that:
* Pigeons have the capacity to share attention between different
dimensions of a stimulus, but (like humans and other animals) their
performance with multiple dimensions is worse than with a single
stimulus dimension.
* Pigeons can be taught relatively complex actions and response
sequences, and can learn to make responses in different sequences.
* Pigeons readily learn to respond in the presence of one simple
stimulus and withhold responding in the presence of a different
stimulus, or to make different responses in the presence of different
stimuli.
* Pigeons can discriminate between other individual pigeons, and
can use the behaviour of another individual as a cue to tell them
what response to make.
* Pigeons readily learn to make discriminative responses to different
categories of stimuli, defined either by arbitrary rules (e.g. green
triangles) or by human concepts (e.g. pictures of human beings).
* They do less well with categories defined by abstract logical
relationships, e.g. "symmetrical" or "same",
though some experimenters have successfully trained pigeons to discriminate
such categories.
* Pigeons seem to require more information than humans for constructing
a three-dimensional image from a plane representation.
* Pigeons seem to have difficulty in dealing with problems involving
classes of classes. Thus they do not do very well with the isolation
of a relationship among variables, as against a representation of
a set of exemplars.
* Pigeons can remember large numbers of individual images for a
long time, e.g. hundreds of images for periods of several years.
All these are capacities that are likely to be found in most mammal
and bird species. In addition pigeons have unusual, perhaps unique,
abilities to learn routes back to their home from long distances.
This homing behaviour is different from that of birds that show
migration, which usually occurs over a fixed route at fixed times
of the year, whereas homing is more flexible; however similar mechanisms
may be involved.
Additionally pigeons may be among the very few animals to pass
the mirror test[1] — which tests whether an animal recognizes
its reflection as an image of itself — along with common chimpanzees,
bonobos, orangutans, dolphins, african grey parrots, crows, magpies,
elephants, and humans. However, the tests which purported to show
that pigeons could pass the mirror test have been criticized by
many scientists.[citation needed]

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