Unsupervised visual discrimination learning of complex stimuli: Accuracy, bias and generalization

被引:4
|
作者
Montefusco-Siegmund, Rodrigo [1 ,5 ]
Toro, Mauricio [3 ]
Maldonado, Pedro E. [1 ,2 ]
Aylwin, Maria de la L. [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Chile, Inst Neurociencia Biomed, Santiago, Chile
[2] Univ Chile, Fac Med, Dept Neurociencias, Santiago, Chile
[3] Univ Chile, Ctr Invest Avanzada Educ, Santiago, Chile
[4] Univ Talca, Escuela Med, Av Lircay S-N, Talca, Chile
[5] Univ Austral Chile, Escuela Kinesiol, Valdivia, Chile
关键词
Discrimination learning; Visual discrimination; Unsupervised learning; Same-different; Bias; Generalization; DIFFUSION-MODEL ANALYSIS; PERCEPTUAL EXPERTISE; WORKING-MEMORY; RESPONSE BIAS; RECOGNITION; REPRESENTATIONS; PROBABILITY; CAPACITY; FEEDBACK; CORTEX;
D O I
10.1016/j.visres.2018.05.002
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Through same-different judgements, we can discriminate an immense variety of stimuli and consequently, they are critical in our everyday interaction with the environment. The quality of the judgements depends on familiarity with stimuli. A way to improve the discrimination is through learning, but to this day, we lack direct evidence of how learning shapes the same-different judgments with complex stimuli. We studied unsupervised visual discrimination learning in 42 participants, as they performed same-different judgments with two types of unfamiliar complex stimuli in the absence of labeling or individuation. Across nine daily training sessions with equiprobable same and different stimuli pairs, participants increased the sensitivity and the criterion by reducing the errors with both same and different pairs. With practice, there was a superior performance for different pairs and a bias for different response. To evaluate the process underlying this bias, we manipulated the proportion of same and different pairs, which resulted in an additional proportion-induced bias, suggesting that the bias observed with equal proportions was a stimulus processing bias. Overall, these results suggest that unsupervised discrimination learning occurs through changes in the stimulus processing that increase the sensory evidence and/or the precision of the working memory. Finally, the acquired discrimination ability was fully transferred to novel exemplars of the practiced stimuli category, in agreement with the acquisition of a category specific perceptual expertise.
引用
收藏
页码:37 / 48
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Tactile recognition of visual stimuli: Specificity versus generalization of perceptual learning
    Arnold, Gabriel
    Auvray, Malika
    VISION RESEARCH, 2018, 152 : 40 - 50
  • [2] Real time unsupervised learning of visual stimuli in neuromorphic VLSI systems
    Giulioni, Massimiliano
    Corradi, Federico
    Dante, Vittorio
    del Giudice, Paolo
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2015, 5
  • [3] Dissecting the Roles of Supervised and Unsupervised Learning in Perceptual Discrimination Judgments
    Loewenstein, Yonatan
    Raviv, Ofri
    Ahissar, Merav
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2021, 41 (04) : 757 - 765
  • [4] Visual discrimination and adaptation using non-linear unsupervised learning
    Jimenez, Sandra
    Laparra, Valero
    Malo, Jesus
    HUMAN VISION AND ELECTRONIC IMAGING XVIII, 2013, 8651
  • [5] Stimulus characteristics, learning bias and visual discrimination in zebrafish (Danio rerio)
    Santaca, Maria
    Dadda, Marco
    Petrazzini, Maria Elena Miletto
    Bisazza, Angelo
    BEHAVIOURAL PROCESSES, 2021, 192
  • [6] Bumble bee visual learning: simple solutions for complex stimuli
    Guiraud, Marie-Genevieve
    Gallo, Vince
    Quinsal-Keel, Emily
    Maboudi, Hadi
    ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2025, 221
  • [7] Asymmetric stimulus representations bias visual perceptual learning
    Laamerad, Pooya
    Awada, Asmara
    Pack, Christopher C.
    Bakhtiari, Shahab
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2024, 24 (01): : 1 - 16
  • [8] Male and female guppies differ in speed but not in accuracy in visual discrimination learning
    Lucon-Xiccato T.
    Bisazza A.
    Animal Cognition, 2016, 19 (4) : 733 - 744
  • [9] EFFECTS OF NATURAL MOOD CHANGES ON DISCRIMINATION AND RESPONSE BIAS IN A VISUAL-DISCRIMINATION TASK
    OTTO, JH
    HANZE, M
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR EXPERIMENTELLE UND ANGEWANDTE PSYCHOLOGIE, 1994, 41 (04): : 566 - 583
  • [10] Visual Learning Shapes the Processing of Complex Movement Stimuli in the Human Brain
    Jastorff, Jan
    Kourtzi, Zoe
    Giese, Martin A.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2009, 29 (44) : 14026 - 14038