T
Touchstone
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Here’s study that’s come up in other conversations that I think is relevant to the issue of abstraction and conceptualization as natural phenomena, here:The common sense conclusion is that studies in this genre cannot be applied to the functions/abilities of human nature.
Discriminating the Relation Between Relations: The Role of Entropy in Abstract Conceptualization by Baboons (Papio papio} and Humans (Homo sapiens)
The link is to the PDF of the entire article. Here’s an interesting fragment:
We have recently discovered that, when they are trained and tested under similar experimental conditions, animals from widely different species can acquire a same-different concept. In one illustrative example (W asserman, Hugart, & Kirkpatrick-Steger, 1995; Young & Wasserman, 1997, Experiment 1), pigeons were first taught to peck one button when they viewed an array of computer icons that comprised 16 copies of the same icon and to peck a second button when they viewed an array that comprised one copy of 16 different icons (a same-different discrimination task). These same and different training displays were created from one set of 16 computer icons. The pigeons were later tested with new same and new different displays that were created from a second set of 16 computer icons that had never before been shown during discrimination training. Accuracy to the training stimuli averaged from 83% to 93% correct, and accuracy to the testing stimuli averaged from 71% to 79% correct; in each case, choice accuracy reliably exceeded the chance score of 50% correct. Such robust discrimination learning and stimulus generalization attest to the pigeon’s acquisition of an abstract same-different concept (for more on the nature of this concept, see Wasserman, Young, & Nolan, 2000; Young & Wasserman, 1997; Young, Wasserman, & Dalrymple, 1997; Young, Wasserman, & Garner, 1997).
In a second illustrative example (Wasserman, Fagot, & Young, 2001), baboons were similarly trained and tested with the same visual stimuli. Accuracy to the training stimuli averaged 91% correct, and accuracy to the testing stimuli averaged 81% correct; in each case, choice accuracy reliably exceeded the chance score of 50% correct.
It’s important to grasp the distinctions being made here between simply identifying “difference”, and abstracting the concepts of “sameness” and “difference”. When the baboon (or human) is shown a grid of icons that are each different with respect to each other, the concept of “internal difference” is learned, and transported to new displays. That means that when the baboon subject is presented with a new grid of icons, icons which are NOT icons seen before, the baboon is able to apply the abstraction of “internal difference” or “instance variance” – images that are different with respect to each other.It is a highly advanced intellectual feat for animals like pigeons and baboons to detect the sameness or differentness of a collection of visual stimuli and to make two distinctively different responses in order to report those same-different relations (Delius, 1994). An even more advanced feat would be for animals to match the relation between relations—in other words, to exhibit the essence of analogical reasoning (Premack, 1983; Thompson & Oden, 2000).
This is not visual recognition of the prior images. The sample is shown, then a pair of choices is presented. The “correct answer” is NOT a duplicate of the images in the sample when the icons are different in the sample. The “answer” icons are different with respect to each other, but ALSO different with respect to the icons in the sample. This means the baboon is no recognizing the original (sample) icons, but is instead recognizing the icons relationship to each other – “difference”. An abstraction – a conceptual isomorophism where the icons themselves are irrelevant, but what is salient for the cognitive process is the visual relationship between them.
The “General Discussion” section of the paper opens thus:
There’s page of discussion provided in anticipation to the objection that the results can be accounted for by perceptual mechanisms without abstraction, worth a read if you’re inclined to protest along those lines (page 326).General Discussion*There is no evidence that monkeys can perceive, let alone judge, relations-between-relations. This analogical conceptual capacity is found only in chimpanzees and humans. *(Thompson & Oden, 2000, p. 363)
The results of the present series of experiments suggest that we reconsider Thompson and Oden’s (2000) recent appraisal of the species generality of abstract relational conceptualization. Perhaps baboons too can judge the relation between relations. However, might their successful relational matching behavior have been based solely on a perceptual attribute of the displays?
My reason for posting this study is to draw attention to the experimental evidence that the natural brain can and does possess abstraction faculties, in this case the ability to judge “relations between relations”, a second-order judgment, observed in baboons (and humans), baboons ostensibly being without an “intellective soul”, or whatever immaterial thing is supposed to account for conceptual processing in humans by subscribers to supernaturalist models of mind.
-TS