Journal
CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 597-601Publisher
CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2008.03.058
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Funding
- NEI NIH HHS [R01 EY017835, R01 EY017835-02] Funding Source: Medline
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When we perceive a visual object, we implicitly or explicitly associate it with a category we know [1-3]. It is known that the visual system can use local, informative image fragments of a given object, rather than the whole object, to classify it into a familiar category [4-8]. How we acquire informative fragments has remained unclear. Here, we show that human observers acquire informative fragments during the initial learning of categories. We created new, but naturalistic, classes of visual objects by using a novel virtual phylogenesis(VP) algorithm that simulates key aspects of how biological categories evolve. Subjects were trained to distinguish two of these classes by using whole exemplar objects, not fragments. We hypothesized that if the visual system learns informative object fragments during category learning, then subjects must be able to perform the newly learned categorization by using only the fragments as opposed to whole objects. We found that subjects were able to successfully perform the classification task by using each of the informative fragments by itself, but not by using any of the comparable, but uninformative, fragments. Our results not only reveal that novel categories can be learned by discovering informative fragments but also introduce and illustrate the use of VP as a versatile tool for category-learning research.
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