Siamese fighting fish showed a waning tendency to view both their own reflections and a similar fish during trials lasting 32 hr. Although both stimuli elicited aggressive displays, all Ss spent more time viewing their reflections than viewing the live stimulus fish.
%0 Journal Article
%1 RefWorks:213
%A Baenninger, Ronald
%D 1966
%J Psychonomic Science
%K betta-splendens conspecific habituation mirror preference
%T Waning of aggressive motivation in Betta splendens
%X Siamese fighting fish showed a waning tendency to view both their own reflections and a similar fish during trials lasting 32 hr. Although both stimuli elicited aggressive displays, all Ss spent more time viewing their reflections than viewing the live stimulus fish.
@article{RefWorks:213,
abstract = {Siamese fighting fish showed a waning tendency to view both their own reflections and a similar fish during trials lasting 32 hr. Although both stimuli elicited aggressive displays, all Ss spent more time viewing their reflections than viewing the live stimulus fish.},
added-at = {2008-03-11T21:30:29.000+0100},
author = {Baenninger, Ronald},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/27f0d1095475249e1fec8bac88c0b1af7/toby},
citeulike-article-id = {163270},
interhash = {dad3b59b146db258d60affc0924a90bc},
intrahash = {7f0d1095475249e1fec8bac88c0b1af7},
journal = {Psychonomic Science},
keywords = {betta-splendens conspecific habituation mirror preference},
priority = {2},
timestamp = {2008-03-11T21:30:30.000+0100},
title = {Waning of aggressive motivation in Betta splendens},
year = 1966
}