4.5 Article

Macaques preferentially attend to intermediately surprising information

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2022.0144

Keywords

attention; statistical learning; eye tracking; rhesus macaque

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Research shows that rhesus monkeys, like humans, tend to pay more attention to events of moderate surprisingness even without specific goals or rewards. This attentional preference may be an evolutionary strategy to guide intelligent organisms towards the most useful learning materials.
Normative learning theories dictate that we should preferentially attend to informative sources, but only up to the point that our limited learning systems can process their content. Humans, including infants, show this predicted strategic deployment of attention. Here, we demonstrate that rhesus monkeys, much like humans, attend to events of moderate surprisingness over both more and less surprising events. They do this in the absence of any specific goal or contingent reward, indicating that the behavioural pattern is spontaneous. We suggest this U-shaped attentional preference represents an evolutionarily preserved strategy for guiding intelligent organisms toward material that is maximally useful for learning.

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