{"title":"猕猴(Macaca mulatta)同时使用多种认知机制进行排序。","authors":"Rael Sammeroff, Robert R Hampton","doi":"10.1037/com0000405","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Memorizing the relations between items and learning relational rules are two ways in which sets of items can be ranked. We investigated the interaction of these types of learning in a series of five experiments with six adult male rhesus monkeys. We presented monkeys with three types of image sets. Scene sets were random images of natural scenes or cityscapes with no perceptually evident pattern by which to rank them. Relations among these images had to be learned through trial and error. Patterned sets were shapes that varied systematically along a physical dimension such as size such that a single rule for ranking them could be applied across images. Disordered sets were the same as Patterned sets, but monkeys were trained to rank them in an arbitrary order that was not consistent with differences along a physical dimension. Monkeys learned Scene sets more quickly than Patterned sets and Disordered sets, suggesting that monkeys memorize the relations between images relatively easily. In follow-up experiments, we found that monkeys also learned rules for the Patterned sets, indicated by the fact that they generalized performance to novel images and reversed ranks across the whole set after training with a single reversed pair. In Experiments 4 and 5, we investigated the interaction of memorization and relational rule learning with compound image sets that included both systematic physical variation and arbitrary visual content. We found further evidence that monkeys ordered images by both memorization and rules. 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Scene sets were random images of natural scenes or cityscapes with no perceptually evident pattern by which to rank them. Relations among these images had to be learned through trial and error. Patterned sets were shapes that varied systematically along a physical dimension such as size such that a single rule for ranking them could be applied across images. Disordered sets were the same as Patterned sets, but monkeys were trained to rank them in an arbitrary order that was not consistent with differences along a physical dimension. Monkeys learned Scene sets more quickly than Patterned sets and Disordered sets, suggesting that monkeys memorize the relations between images relatively easily. In follow-up experiments, we found that monkeys also learned rules for the Patterned sets, indicated by the fact that they generalized performance to novel images and reversed ranks across the whole set after training with a single reversed pair. In Experiments 4 and 5, we investigated the interaction of memorization and relational rule learning with compound image sets that included both systematic physical variation and arbitrary visual content. We found further evidence that monkeys ordered images by both memorization and rules. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
记忆项目之间的关系和学习关系规则是对项目进行排序的两种方式。我们对6只成年雄性恒河猴进行了5次实验,研究了这些类型的学习之间的相互作用。我们向猴子展示了三种类型的图像集。场景集是自然场景或城市景观的随机图像,没有明显的感知模式来对它们进行排序。这些图像之间的关系必须通过反复试验来了解。有图案的集合是沿着物理维度(如大小)系统地变化的形状,这样就可以在图像中应用单一的排序规则。无序集和图案集是一样的,但猴子被训练成按任意顺序排列它们,这与物理维度上的差异不一致。猴子学习场景集的速度比学习图案集和无序集的速度要快,这表明猴子相对容易记住图像之间的关系。在后续的实验中,我们发现猴子也学习了图案组的规则,这表明它们在使用单个反转对进行训练后,将表现推广到新图像和反转整个集合的顺序。在实验4和5中,我们研究了记忆和关系规则学习与包含系统物理变化和任意视觉内容的复合图像集的相互作用。我们进一步发现了猴子通过记忆和规则来排序图像的证据。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA,版权所有)。
Monkeys (Macaca mulatta) rank lists using multiple cognitive mechanisms simultaneously.
Memorizing the relations between items and learning relational rules are two ways in which sets of items can be ranked. We investigated the interaction of these types of learning in a series of five experiments with six adult male rhesus monkeys. We presented monkeys with three types of image sets. Scene sets were random images of natural scenes or cityscapes with no perceptually evident pattern by which to rank them. Relations among these images had to be learned through trial and error. Patterned sets were shapes that varied systematically along a physical dimension such as size such that a single rule for ranking them could be applied across images. Disordered sets were the same as Patterned sets, but monkeys were trained to rank them in an arbitrary order that was not consistent with differences along a physical dimension. Monkeys learned Scene sets more quickly than Patterned sets and Disordered sets, suggesting that monkeys memorize the relations between images relatively easily. In follow-up experiments, we found that monkeys also learned rules for the Patterned sets, indicated by the fact that they generalized performance to novel images and reversed ranks across the whole set after training with a single reversed pair. In Experiments 4 and 5, we investigated the interaction of memorization and relational rule learning with compound image sets that included both systematic physical variation and arbitrary visual content. We found further evidence that monkeys ordered images by both memorization and rules. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Comparative Psychology publishes original research from a comparative perspective
on the behavior, cognition, perception, and social relationships of diverse species.