Literature DB >> 33846254

Sensitivity to geometric shape regularity in humans and baboons: A putative signature of human singularity.

Mathias Sablé-Meyer1,2, Joël Fagot3,4, Serge Caparos5,6, Timo van Kerkoerle7, Marie Amalric8, Stanislas Dehaene1,2.   

Abstract

Among primates, humans are special in their ability to create and manipulate highly elaborate structures of language, mathematics, and music. Here we show that this sensitivity to abstract structure is already present in a much simpler domain: the visual perception of regular geometric shapes such as squares, rectangles, and parallelograms. We asked human subjects to detect an intruder shape among six quadrilaterals. Although the intruder was always defined by an identical amount of displacement of a single vertex, the results revealed a geometric regularity effect: detection was considerably easier when either the base shape or the intruder was a regular figure comprising right angles, parallelism, or symmetry rather than a more irregular shape. This effect was replicated in several tasks and in all human populations tested, including uneducated Himba adults and French kindergartners. Baboons, however, showed no such geometric regularity effect, even after extensive training. Baboon behavior was captured by convolutional neural networks (CNNs), but neither CNNs nor a variational autoencoder captured the human geometric regularity effect. However, a symbolic model, based on exact properties of Euclidean geometry, closely fitted human behavior. Our results indicate that the human propensity for symbolic abstraction permeates even elementary shape perception. They suggest a putative signature of human singularity and provide a challenge for nonsymbolic models of human shape perception.

Entities:  

Keywords:  comparative cognition; developmental psychology; geometry; human singularity; neural network modeling

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33846254      PMCID: PMC8072260          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2023123118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  44 in total

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Journal:  Science       Date:  2007-09-07       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Category learning in rhesus monkeys: a study of the Shepard, Hovland, and Jenkins (1961) tasks.

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Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  2004-09

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Journal:  Science       Date:  2017-10-26       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Production and perception rules underlying visual patterns: effects of symmetry and hierarchy.

Authors:  Gesche Westphal-Fitch; Ludwig Huber; Juan Carlos Gómez; W Tecumseh Fitch
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2012-07-19       Impact factor: 6.237

8.  Representation of spatial sequences using nested rules in human prefrontal cortex.

Authors:  Liping Wang; Marie Amalric; Wen Fang; Xinjian Jiang; Christophe Pallier; Santiago Figueira; Mariano Sigman; Stanislas Dehaene
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2018-10-25       Impact factor: 6.556

9.  Recurrent neural networks can explain flexible trading of speed and accuracy in biological vision.

Authors:  Courtney J Spoerer; Tim C Kietzmann; Johannes Mehrer; Ian Charest; Nikolaus Kriegeskorte
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2020-10-02       Impact factor: 4.475

10.  Cross-species functional alignment reveals evolutionary hierarchy within the connectome.

Authors:  Ting Xu; Karl-Heinz Nenning; Ernst Schwartz; Seok-Jun Hong; Joshua T Vogelstein; Alexandros Goulas; Damien A Fair; Charles E Schroeder; Daniel S Margulies; Jonny Smallwood; Michael P Milham; Georg Langs
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2020-09-09       Impact factor: 7.400

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  2 in total

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Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 14.919

2.  Disjunctive inference in preverbal infants.

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Journal:  iScience       Date:  2021-10-02
  2 in total

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