In summary, the basic features of object category learning in pigeons are the following. First, pigeons can learn a variety of complex object categories and transfer this learning to novel objects. Second, pigeons can flexibly classify the same object according to different criteria (e.g., pseudocategories and superordinate categories). Third, pigeons extract a rich variety of visual properties from photographic images and use them in combination to learn the structure of object categories. Finally, pigeons learn common abstract representations for all members of the same trained category.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4195317/
In the study, 16 pigeons were trained to detect cancer by putting them in a roomy chamber where magnified biopsies of possible breast cancers were displayed. Correctly identifying a growth as benign or malignant by pecking one of two answer buttons on a touchscreen earned them a tasty 45 milligram pigeon pellet. Once trained, the pigeons’ average diagnostic accuracy reached an impressive 85 percent. But when a “flock sourcing” approach was taken, in which the most common answer among all subjects was used, group accuracy climbed to a staggering 99 percent, or what would be expected from a pathologist. The pigeons were also able to apply their knowledge to novel images, showing the findings weren’t simply a result of rote memorization.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/using-pigeons-to-diagnose-cancer/
Human perception is of course linguistically scaffolded and so that takes it to a higher semiotic level. — apokrisis
We can say that a pigeon perceives precisely the same way that humans do — creativesoul
Thus, if our notion of perception includes that which is existentially contingent upon written language, then we would be forced to deny any and all creatures without written language the very capability. — creativesoul
To know the differences between pigeon perception and human perception one must know what both respectively consist of and require. — creativesoul
So the mind isn't part of the world? Then how do minds interact if not through the medium of the shared world? What is it that divides minds to call them separate? It seems that once you start down the path of claiming the mind isn't part of the world, you start down the path towards solipsism. — Harry Hindu
Dream experiences of a tree differ from perceptual experiences of a tree in that we subsequently realise that the experience was in a dream, whereas for perceptual ones we do not. — andrewk
Similarly, hallucination experiences can be distinguished from perceptual ones after the event, when the LSD or psychotic state has worn off. — andrewk
I would maybe contrast quantitative mechanism to "artistic"/metaphorical/interpretative thinking. Both seem essential and always already in operation. — t0m
I still contend both of our basic "metaphysical" positions are intimately related to our own notions of the virtuous individual. The "true" scientist or philosopher is every bit as heroic as Wolverine. Your demystification of individuality is (in other words) an expression of individuality. We are "selling" ourselves, one might say, asserting implicitly the potential value of our words for others. — t0m
The bicycle is "ready-to-hand" in the knowing-style of "know-how." This is largely the way that things exist for us, not as entities for disengaged theory but rather as tools that become invisible the more successfully we use them to pursue the goal we are conscious of while using them. Do you agree? — t0m
I'm not 'shrugging it off', but I am pointing out that Shannon's theory was originally published as a theory about information transmission — Wayfarer
So, what is the relationship between logical and thermodynamic entropy? it seems to me that they're being equivocated. — Wayfarer
By "pre-science" I mean the establishing of what counts as evidence in the first place. — t0m
We started to think that this non-intuititive way of "deworlding" objects gave us the real object. I'd say that it just rips the object from the fullness of our experience of it in a way that's good for certain purposes. Beyond the usual "sentimental" objections to this, there is also the question of not wanting to inaccurately understand the world by uncritically being trapped in just one framework. — t0m
It's just that this notion of the shared world in terms of tool-use is at least as old as Being and Time. — t0m
So it's odd to see it presented as some new idea in a 1979 book. — t0m
But what I quoted reminds me of the emergence or generation of "one" or they-self or "everyday Dasein" as the foundation on which the individual self is built. This is the 'operating system' that makes theory and individuation possible. — t0m
Last night it dreamed it was a butterfly, and then awoke, wondering if it was a butterfly dreaming. — Marchesk
Isn't this just Heidegger? — t0m
That has to be taken with a grain of salt, because it depends on how familiar a scientist is with the philosophical arguments. Sometimes a scientist will publicly articulate a philosophical position that's not terribly sophisticated, but they act as if the science backs it, because they don't know the depth of the philosophical discussion on the matter. — Marchesk
You often refer to that, but this was part of his paper on sending and receiving information, wasn't it? It wasn't a philosophical theory as such, was it? — Wayfarer
This still assumes that the fundamental forms are physical. I have been researching the Forms, which is the 'formal' side of hylomorphism, and the original concept of the Forms is that they are outside space and time altogether. The motivation of early philosophy was not instrumental or scientific in our sense- it was as much 'the quest for the transcendent' as the quest for useful knowledge about the sensory domain. — Wayfarer
That's where "Romanticism" comes in, which thinks in terms of these fundamental interpretations. It's "pre-science" or "pre-metaphysics" in that it thinks the conditions of possibility for metaphysical, scientific, and religious frameworks. On the other hand, it is itself such a framework, self-consciously holding itself at a distance from (other) particular commitments. — t0m
The words don't constrain my mind at all, that is a completely deterministic assumption. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can follow the words, but my mind follows the words due to habits it has produced. The constraints on my interpretation are these habits, they are not the words. — Metaphysician Undercover
The words themselves have absolutely no power over the human being. — Metaphysician Undercover
But direct realists would make an exception for veridical perception and say that it's one way information flow from the senses to the brain. — Marchesk
But if perceive a tree looking like it might fall on my house, then I will take action. — Marchesk
But then what does a dream tree represent? — Marchesk
How could they be, if the being has to interpret the sign to determine the constraints required for interpretation? — Metaphysician Undercover
All constraints on interpretation occur within the mind of the interpreter and this can be expressed as habit, or lack of habit. — Metaphysician Undercover
In other words, information is a lack of uniformity per Donald MacCrimmon MacKay and Gregory Bateson. — Galuchat
Is information physical (meaningless), semantic (meaningful), or both (independently or simultaneously)? — Galuchat
But you're wondering how perception can involve awareness of both mental and non-mental properties of an object. That is a good question. — Marchesk
That's the reason the argument from hallucination has bite. — Marchesk
But is the tree mental when we actually perceive one (see, smell, touch, hear it fall in the woods, etc)? — Marchesk
It's weird, because I can go to SEP and it will clearly state what direct realism is about... — Marchesk
No, we're talking about the perceived tree. Is it a mental image or not? That's what direct/indirect realism comes down to. All this other stuff is confusing the issue. — Marchesk
But is inorganic matter on a continuum with life and mind? Or is there a discontinuity there? — Wayfarer
I think that 'soul' might be productively interpreted as a metaphorical expression for the subjective unity of consciousness; it is the principle by which the being hangs together, physiologically, psychologically, and even spiritually (which is also very close to Aristotle's meaning). But when you ask, 'what is this principle' or 'where is this principle', then that is a reification. But it's also not simply non-existent. This is the point that I think perplexes everyone in this conversation - as soon as you name it, you reify it, and then ask 'can it exist'? But that's a reification and therefore a category error. — Wayfarer
There are only two broad types of phenomena which I think embody 'interpretance', namely, organisms, and minds. — Wayfarer
As a stand in for all sorts of things from rudimentary seeing and hearing to complex linguistic conceptions... — creativesoul
Let's make this really, really simple. What is the result of visually perceiving a tree?
A. Seeing a mental image.
B. Seeing the tree.
I'll let your unsupervised neural network categorize the two. — Marchesk
You could argue that a neuron simply responds to an electrical charge from a connected neuron. — Marchesk
The brain has to do be able to recognize a shape somehow. It's not magic, and shapes don't float along on photons into the eyes and travel from there on electrons into the homunculus sitting in the visual cortex. — Marchesk
No philosopher is going to defend a totally naive view of vision which involves an object showing up in the mind magically. There has to be a process. — Marchesk
The question is whether the process of perception creates an intermediary which we are aware of when perceiving, or whether it's merely the mechanics of seeing, hearing, touching, etc. — Marchesk
But you could use a camera stationed anywhere, and see what sort of objects an unsupervised network will learn to categorize. — Marchesk
