News Release

Exploring the strategies of categorization

Biopsychology

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Ruhr-University Bochum

Categorisation harnesses knowledge for new experiences

Colloquially referred to as pigeonholing, categorisation learning often has a rather negative connotation in the public eye. Yet the basic cognitive ability to categorise offers a significant advantage: it condenses the flood of objects and events in our environment on the basis of commonalities and makes the knowledge that we have accumulated usable for new experiences.

In the field of science, the aspects stimuli that determine the classification into a category have been the subject of controversial debate for a long time. The study conducted by the Bochum-based research team now offers insights into this question – through a research approach using computer-generated stimuli in combination with a machine learning analysis of the pecking behaviour of pigeons. “We specialise in working with these animals,” points out Dr. Roland Pusch, lead author of the study. “Pigeons have a highly developed visual system and show excellent performance in behavioural tests. This makes them an excellent model system to tackle this question.”

Pigeons’ specific pecking behaviour facilitates detailed analysis

The biopsychologists trained the pigeons to distinguish between digitally produced images on the screen and divide them into categories by pecking at the monitor. “We precisely defined the properties of the image stimuli,” as Pusch outlines the process. “Through so-called virtual phylogenesis, we created two object families with 20 members each on the computer. Based on its properties, each object clearly belonged to family X or family Y and could thus be categorised accordingly by the animals.” “The trump card in our research series was the specific pecking behaviour of pigeons,” adds project leader Professor Onur Güntürkün. “After training, pigeons use pecking to indicate whether an object belongs to a category or not. At the same time, they also mark exactly the spot on the object that was decisive for their categorisation choice.”

Based on the automated recording, the researchers pinpointed the locations on the objects that the pigeons touched when they made their choices on the monitor. “The pecking behaviour of individual animals was very consistent. This leads us to the conclusion that the animals attach importance to very specific characteristics of the stimuli,” says Pusch. “Interestingly enough, despite identical behaviour, these preferences are different in each individual; in other words, each pigeon has its very own specific characteristics that it considers important in the two families of objects. This suggests that categorisation learning is not limited to a single learning strategy.”

According to Pusch and Güntürkün, the combination of virtual phylogenesis and the machine learning approach offers a lot of potential for subsequent research in the field of categorisation learning. For example, the method opens up the possibility of studying species-specific behavioural strategies in comparative experiments in addition to its sensory basis. Beyond the behavioural analysis, neuronal processes that trigger categorisation learning in the brain could also be explored in detail.


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