Stimulus Control of Odorant Concentration: Pilot Study of Generalization and Discrimination of Odor Concentration in Canines

被引:13
作者
DeChant, Mallory T. [1 ]
Bunker, Paul C. [2 ]
Hall, Nathaniel J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Texas Tech Univ, Dept Food & Anim Sci, Lubbock, TX 79409 USA
[2] Chiron K9, San Antonio, TX 78251 USA
关键词
canine detection; odor discrimination; concentration generalization; OLFACTORY DISCRIMINATION; EXPLOSIVES DETECTION; HOMOLOGOUS SERIES; SCENT DETECTION; DOGS; ABILITY; ACCURACY; EFFICACY; SEARCH;
D O I
10.3390/ani11020326
中图分类号
S8 [畜牧、 动物医学、狩猎、蚕、蜂];
学科分类号
0905 ;
摘要
Simple Summary Dogs are deployed worldwide for detection tasks, but little is known about how they spontaneously generalize between concentration variations of their trained odor. This study found that dogs spontaneously generalized within a 10-fold concentration range lower than the training stimulus. Further, dogs could be trained to discriminate between concentrations within that 10-fold range. However, discrimination training did not affect dogs' spontaneous generalization to the odor concentration unless discrimination training occurred in compound with generalization testing, suggesting that relative stimulus control of the target and non-target concentrations might be important in determining whether dogs will respond. Despite dogs' widespread use as detection systems, little is known about how dogs generalize to variations of an odorant's concentration. Further, it is unclear whether dogs can be trained to discriminate between similar concentration variations of an odorant. Four dogs were trained to an odorant (0.01 air dilution of isoamyl acetate) in an air-dilution olfactometer, and we assessed spontaneous generalization to a range of concentrations lower than the training stimulus (Generalization Test 1). Dogs generalized to odors within a 10-fold range of the training odorant. Next, we conducted discrimination training to suppress responses to concentrations lower than a concentration dogs showed initial responding towards in Generalization Test 1 (0.0025 air dilution). Dogs successfully discriminated between 0.0025 and 0.01, exceeding 90% accuracy. However, when a second generalization test was conducted (Generalization Test 2), responding at the 0.0025 concentration immediately recovered and was no different than in Generalization Test 1. Dogs were then tested in another generalization test (Compound Discrimination and Generalization) in which generalization probes were embedded within discrimination trials, and dogs showed suppression of responding to the 0.0025 concentration and lower concentrations in this preparation. These data suggest dogs show limited spontaneous generalization across odor concentration and that dogs can be trained to discriminate between similar concentrations of the same odorant. Stimulus control, however, may depend on the negative stimulus, suggesting olfactory concentration generalization may depend on relative stimulus control. These results highlight the importance of considering odor concentration as a dimension for generalization in canine olfactory research.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 14
页数:14
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]   Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4 [J].
Bates, Douglas ;
Maechler, Martin ;
Bolker, Benjamin M. ;
Walker, Steven C. .
JOURNAL OF STATISTICAL SOFTWARE, 2015, 67 (01) :1-48
[2]  
Bird Robert, 1997, KY L J, V85, P405
[3]  
Cablk ME, 2006, ECOL APPL, V16, P1926, DOI 10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[1926:AARODI]2.0.CO
[4]  
2
[5]  
Cleland Thomas A, 2011, Front Neuroeng, V4, P21, DOI 10.3389/fneng.2011.00021
[6]   Multiple Learning Parameters Differentially Regulate Olfactory Generalization [J].
Cleland, Thomas A. ;
Narla, Venkata Anupama ;
Boudadi, Karim .
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2009, 123 (01) :26-35
[7]   Canine Olfactory Thresholds to Amyl Acetate in a Biomedical Detection Scenario [J].
Concha, Astrid R. ;
Guest, Claire M. ;
Harris, Rob ;
Pike, Thomas W. ;
Feugier, Alexandre ;
Zulch, Helen ;
Mills, Daniel S. .
FRONTIERS IN VETERINARY SCIENCE, 2019, 5
[8]   Let me sniff! Nosework induces positive judgment bias in pet dogs [J].
Duranton, C. ;
Horowitz, A. .
APPLIED ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR SCIENCE, 2019, 211 :61-66
[9]   The scientific foundation and efficacy of the use of canines as chemical detectors for explosives [J].
Furton, KG ;
Myers, LJ .
TALANTA, 2001, 54 (03) :487-500
[10]   Explosives detection by sniffer dogs following strenuous physical activity [J].
Gazit, I ;
Terkel, J .
APPLIED ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR SCIENCE, 2003, 81 (02) :149-161