Implicit and Explicit Categorization: A Tale of Four Species

Abstract

Categorization is essential for survival, and it is a widely studied cognitive adaptation in humans and animals. An influential neuroscience perspective differentiates in humans an explicit, rule-based categorization system from an implicit system that slowly associates response outputs to different regions of perceptual space. This perspective is being extended to study categorization in other vertebrate species, using category tasks that have a one-dimensional, rule based solution or a two-dimensional, information-integration solution. Humans macaques, and capuchin monkeys strongly dimensionalize perceptual stimuli and learn rule-based tasks more quickly. In sharp contrast, pigeons learn these two tasks equally quickly. Pigeons represent a cognitive system in which the commitment to dimensional analysis and category rules was not strongly made. Their results may reveal the character of the ancestral vertebrate categorization system from which that of primates emerged. The primate results establish continuity with human cognition, suggesting that nonhuman primates share aspects of humans' capacity for explicit cognition. The emergence of dimensional analysis and rule learning could have been an important step in primates' cognitive evolution.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2012
Accession Number
ADA568606

Entities

People

  • Barbara A. Church
  • Brian Spiering
  • F. G. Ashby
  • Joe Boomer
  • Jonathan D. H. Smith
  • Mark E. Berg
  • Matthew J Crossley
  • Matthew S. Murphy
  • Michael J. Beran
  • Robert G. Cook

Organizations

  • University at Buffalo

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acquisition
  • Animals
  • Birds
  • Brain
  • Cognition
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Science
  • Contrast
  • Frequency
  • Language
  • Learning
  • Neurosciences
  • New York
  • Perception
  • Psychology
  • Test Methods
  • Two Dimensional

Fields of Study

  • Biology
  • Psychology

Readers

  • Brain and Cognitive Science; Experimental Psychology; Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Finite Element Method (FEM) for solving Partial Differential Equations (PDEs)
  • Team-Based Human-Centered Cognitive Task Decision Making and Information Performance.

Technology Areas

  • Space