This Lecture is in roughly two parts. The first brief section walks through a Helmhotzian method for perceiving depth via unconscious inference. This inference process is learned (Helmholtz wanted to be an empiricist) but as usual entail loans of intelligence in the form of some givens not acquired via experience. This then raises a question: what exactly is experience, and what about it is used to be the basis for future inference? It turns out what counts as the relevant parts of experience can be very non-obvious, raising many problems that need more modern, less Cartesian solutions.
For Helmholtz, the perception of depth is based on unconscious inferences based on prior binocular visual experiences with objects in depth. The ways in which sensations vary with the details of these experiences are learned via association, and what is learned is implemented as an unconscious inference to solve the problem at any given moment. Specifically, this reasoning is a form of abduction: reasoning from observations via a hypothesis to an underlying fact. In the case of depth perception, you would reason from sensations, using your learned unconscious inference about depth, to infer the cause of those sensations. (See page 179 for examples of the different kinds of reasoning). This can be expressed in Bayesian terms (hence the now-common use of Bayes theory to model sensation-based perception).
The first problem is that this process needs a leg up from a loan of intelligence; the inference requires a hypothesis, and at least some parts of that hypothesis must be given (e.g. the assumption that sensations are caused by something). So even if a lot of the process is learnable, not all of it can be, and the required loan cannot be repaid (as per usual; Lecture 6).
The second problem is figuring out what experience is required for the hypothesis to be learned in the first place. The usual approach is to figure out what it necessary and sufficient for a given perception to occur; what are the plausible and sensible building blocks. You then get these either from the sensations, or (more commonly) from the process that integrates and combines sensations and enriches them into perception. The problem is that what counts as necessary or sufficient can be far from obvious!
Turvey then describes many examples of non-obvious necessary and sufficient parts of experience required for something to be learned (a key name here is Gilbert Gottlieb).
- chicks need to see their feet within 2 days of hatching before they will handle mealworms correctly
- Squirrel monkeys only show fear of snakes if they eat live insects
- honey bee waggle dance behaviour depends on the temperature during their incubation
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