Delius J D, Siemann M
Allgemeine Psychologie, Universität Konstanz, D-78434 Konstanz, Germany.
Behav Processes. 1998 Feb;42(2-3):107-37. doi: 10.1016/s0376-6357(97)00072-7.
In order to survive and reproduce, individual animals need to navigate through a multidimensional utility landscape in a near-optimal way. There is little doubt that the behaviourally more advanced species can bring cognitive competencies to bear on this difficult task. Among the cognitive abilities that are helpful in this context is transitive inference. This is typically the competency to derive the conclusion B>D from the premises A>B, B>C, C>D and D>E that imply the series A>B>C>D>E. In transitive inference tests used with humans, the letters stand for verbal items and the inequality symbols stand for a relational expression. To investigate analogous competencies in non-human animals a non-verbal form of the task is used. The premise pairs are converted into a multiple instrumental discrimination task A+B-, B+C-, C+D- and D+E-, where the letters stand for non-verbal stimuli and the plus and minus symbols indicate that choices of the corresponding stimuli either lead to a reward or to a penalty. When these training pairs are adequately discriminated, transitive responding is tested with intermittent presentations of the novel pair B∘D∘, where the circles indicate that responses to the stimuli are not reinforced. Using variants of this basic conditioning task it has been shown that pigeons, rats, squirrel-monkeys, macaques, chimpanzees, young children, older children and adult humans commonly reveal transitive preferences for B over D. Several theories have been proposed to explain this transitive behaviour. The evidence supporting these various models is reviewed. It is shown that the learning of the premises normally brings about a choice and reinforcement biasing and balancing process that can account for transitive responding. It is argued that a very simple algebraic learning model can satisfactorily simulate many of the results obtained in transitivity experiments, including some produced by human subjects who in principle, could have been applying rational logical rules. It is demonstrated that a value transfer mechanism also assumed to explain transitive responding, is in fact, a real phenomenon based on classical conditioning. However, it is argued that it mostly plays a minor role in transitive responding. It is shown that the algebraic learning model can be easily converted into a neural network model exhibiting an equivalent performance. The model can also be modified to cope with the surprising finding that a proportion of human individuals and a few animals subjects learn to discriminate the premise pairs, but nevertheless fail to respond transitively to the conclusion pair. This modification can simulate the results of experiments using non-linear, in particular circular, relational structures. The evolution of transitive responding is considered within the framework of ecosocial demands and neurobiological constraints. It is concluded that, in agreement with a preadaptation (exaptation) evolutionary origin, it seems to involve little beyond the capacity to learn multiple stimulus discriminations.
为了生存和繁衍,个体动物需要以近乎最优的方式在多维效用景观中导航。毫无疑问,行为上更高级的物种能够运用认知能力来应对这项艰巨任务。在这方面有所帮助的认知能力中,传递性推理是其中之一。这通常是一种从前提A>B、B>C、C>D和D>E推导出结论B>D的能力,这些前提意味着序列A>B>C>D>E。在用于人类的传递性推理测试中,字母代表语言项目,不等号代表关系表达式。为了研究非人类动物的类似能力,使用了该任务的非语言形式。前提对被转换为多重工具性辨别任务A+B-、B+C-、C+D-和D+E-,其中字母代表非语言刺激,加号和减号表示对相应刺激的选择要么导致奖励要么导致惩罚。当这些训练对得到充分辨别后,通过间歇性呈现新的对B∘D∘来测试传递性反应,其中圆圈表示对刺激的反应不被强化。使用这种基本条件任务的变体已经表明,鸽子、大鼠、松鼠猴、猕猴、黑猩猩、幼儿、大龄儿童和成年人通常表现出对B相对于D的传递性偏好。已经提出了几种理论来解释这种传递性行为。对支持这些不同模型的证据进行了综述。结果表明,前提的学习通常会带来一个选择和强化的偏向与平衡过程,这可以解释传递性反应。有人认为,一个非常简单的代数学习模型可以令人满意地模拟传递性实验中获得的许多结果,包括一些由原则上可能应用理性逻辑规则的人类受试者产生的结果。事实证明,一种也被假定用于解释传递性反应的价值转移机制实际上是基于经典条件作用的真实现象。然而,有人认为它在传递性反应中大多起次要作用。结果表明,代数学习模型可以很容易地转换为表现出等效性能的神经网络模型。该模型还可以进行修改,以应对令人惊讶的发现,即一部分人类个体和一些动物受试者学会了辨别前提对,但仍然未能对结论对做出传递性反应。这种修改可以模拟使用非线性、特别是循环关系结构的实验结果。在生态社会需求和神经生物学限制的框架内考虑传递性反应的进化。得出的结论是,与预适应(扩展适应)进化起源一致,它似乎除了学习多重刺激辨别的能力之外几乎不涉及其他能力。