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Studies on Concept Formation. Psych 1090 Lecture 2. The definition of ‘ concept ’ , like that of ‘ cognition ’. is rather flexible and involves many different types of behavior. So we are going to examine concept formation from the simplest to the most complex cases.
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Studies on Concept Formation Psych 1090 Lecture 2
The definition of ‘concept’, like that of ‘cognition’ is rather flexible and involves many different types of behavior
So we are going to examine concept formation from the simplest to the most complex cases And do it for a small (for the moment) variety of species
Concept formation, of at least some sort, is a very basic phenomenon Whether consciously or unconsciously, and organism must distinguish, e.g., • predator from prey/ friend-foe • food from not-food • possible mates from non-mates
And, in any case, creatures must organize the big, confusing world into some form of workable hierarchy so that attention can be paid, shifted, directed, etc. appropriately for survival
One big issue, that we mentioned last time, is whether animals, lacking language, can form concepts and, I said that they can…but now I’ll give some real data
We can split concept formation into three major categories…. • object recognition what is or is not a key or a pencil • relational/abstract bigger/smaller; same/different • equivalence/transitive inference A>B, B>C, C>D, D>E……B?D
We’ll hold off on concepts like same/different and transitive inference for now… There’s enough just on other areas of concept formation for today’s lecture
But even the simplest level, object recognition isn’t really so simple…. Think about the prototypical bird: beak, feathers, wings, flight…
Some of these creatures have some bird-like characteristics and are clearly not birds; Others lack some of these bird-like characteristics and clearly are birds
And, of course, what might be one important category to a bird Might be two to a human:
For a bird, the snakes are ‘functionally equivalent” in that both are predators; But for humans one is dangerous and one is not
And although humans can, for example, detect many variations in neighboring white-crowned sparrow dialects, To a bird in a given dialect, all the others are lumped into the ‘foreign’ category,
And in different areas, different parts of the songs (e.g., trills versus introductory notes) may be critical for recognition
So, one can train an animal like a pigeon to, for example, “categorize” all trees by pecking to picture of a few trees and not to a picture of a bird But pigeons were less easily trained to form the category “car” Something unnatural for it…
And pigeons completely failed when asked to categorize one particular oak leaf from among a number of oak leaves…
More recently, a number of researchers (e.g., Cerella, Watanabe, etc.) showed that pigeons emphasize local cues So they had considerable trouble distinguishing some, but not others of the following….
TTTTTT T T T T T T TTTTTTT T T T T T T Pigeons could find the “T” in either picture, but not the “H” (Anim. Cogn. 2002)
And if given a regular triangle as the positively rewarded choice, and then shown
Pigeons chose the trapezoid rather than the occluded item Suggesting that they chose on the basis of just the line figure
More recently, Watanabe’s group showed that pigeons can’t really discriminate scrambled from unscrambled cartoon figure heads At least until they got really scrambled
1x1 3x3 6x6 12x12
Could discriminate scrambled from unscrambled pictures of pigeon heads
And Wasserman’s group argued that scrambling a line figure makes the task more difficult for the pigeon
But pigeons seem to have a hierarchy of attention So they may first look for curves versus straight edges And then look for specific types of angles
Some researchers nevertheless argue that pigeons can be trained to do any kind of discrimination, and that may be correct… But the point is that some discriminations are more ethologically relevant and thus are trained more easily
Other more subtle issues come up as well…. If you use video for birds, you have to use LCD projectors Because their flicker-fusion rates differ from those of humans, CRT screens are difficult to view
And what is true for a pigeon may not be true for another type of bird… Parrots go anorexic in an operant paradigm and stop responding And some hummingbirds, who are win/shift foragers, have real trouble w/ a win/stay operant paradigm
There’s the issue, too, of neighbor/stranger discrimination in song sparrows… And how at first some data showed it existed and other data didn’t…. But the real issue was knowing the exact territorial boundary…
And, of course, most studies on categorization are done with animals that categorize the world visually, much like humans… But pigeons and people would fail if the criteria were scents…. or subtle auditory cues…
And studies of polymorphous stimuli-- where a combination of attributes must be present for an item to be judged as ‘correct’ Suggest that in pigeons the additive features should be ecologically related for success
Remember our prototypic bird…if we assume wings AND beaks, X X
Let’s look at the study on monkeys and humans, Dépy et al. on the conjoined search
Training was on marked items [yellow vs. blue was color discrimination, not a bar]
The idea was to determine which 2 of 3 qualities, color/shape/location, put a stimulus in C1 or C2
I did it by marking C1 as blue, except if blue, round, and down; C2 as yellow, except for yellow, square up So I didn’t match the human subjects in the study, nor did I use the experimenters’ prototype
I did it more like the baboons than the humans Of course, I didn’t do it by seeing slides for 800 ms and being told if I were correct or not, either
But I would have gotten the prototype right 100%, like the baboons And would matched them on Csl, too
So I’m not at all sure one can draw conclusions as to how a particular species does a particular task
And, of course, animals will try to succeed however they can… Studies on homing pigeons suggest that they’ll use sight for local features or global features, star navigation, smell, or magnetic currents Depending upon what the experimenters knock out!
Thus issues of external validity are extremely important when determining whether an animal is competent or not in any task, and particularly in a categorization task
My parrot, Alex, learned to identify a number of objects with English labels He could also generalize from a piece of an index card to a large 12’x18’ piece of paper
So we trained him on a set of items, then tested him on variations of these things Differently sized pieces of paper, wood, rawhide, etc.