The use of pictures in avian visual cognition research has expanded over the past few decades but understanding of how
birds perceive pictures has not kept pace. Separate evolutionary pathways and distinct differences in existent avian and
mammalian visual systems mean that researchers cannot assume that birds see pictures the way humans do. In this article,
the authors argue that, to avoid anthropomorphic errors, researchers need empirical evidence about correspondence between
perception of their picture stimuli and perception of objects. The authors review a few promising instances of correspondence.
The authors further argue that closer attention should be paid to characteristics of display methodologies and their
appropriateness for avian vision. Finally, they argue that the field will benefit if journal reviewers and editors provide more
useful guidance to researchers about adding evidence of correspondence between the pictures and the real-life objects researchers
claim or imply that their pictures represent. |
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