Hall Nathaniel J, Wynne Clive D L
Texas Tech University, USA.
Arizona State University, USA.
Heliyon. 2018 Dec 8;4(12):e00947. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2018.e00947. eCollection 2018 Dec.
Complex odor mixtures have traditionally been thought to be perceived configurally, implying that there is little identification of the individual components in the mixture. Prior research has suggested that the chemical and or perceptual similarity of components in a mixture may influence whether they can be detected individually; however, how experience and training influence the ability to identify individual components in complex mixtures (a figure-background segregation) is less clear. Figure-background segregation is a critical task for dogs tasked with discriminating between Home Made Explosives and very similar, but innocuous, complex odor mixtures. In a cross-over experimental design, we evaluated the effect of two training procedures on dogs' ability to identify the presence of a critical oxidizer in complex odor mixtures. In the Mixture training procedure, dogs received odor mixtures that varied from trial to trial with and without an oxidizer. In the more typical procedure for canine detection training, dogs were presented with the pure oxidizer only, and had to discriminate this from decoy mixtures (target-only training). Mixture training led to above chance discrimination of the oxidizer from variable backgrounds and dogs were able to readily generalize performance, with no decrement, to mixtures containing novel odorants. Target-only training, however, led to a precipitous drop in hit rate when the oxidizer was presented in a mixture background containing either familiar and/or novel odorants. Furthermore, by giving Target-only trained dogs Mixture training, they learned to identify the oxidizer in mixtures. Together, these results demonstrate that training method has significant impacts on the perception of components in odor mixtures and highlights the importance of olfactory learning for the effective detection of Home Made Explosives by dogs.
传统上认为,复杂气味混合物是通过整体感知的,这意味着混合物中的各个成分很少被识别出来。先前的研究表明,混合物中成分的化学和/或感知相似性可能会影响它们是否能被单独检测到;然而,经验和训练如何影响识别复杂混合物中单个成分的能力(一种图形-背景分离)尚不清楚。对于负责区分自制爆炸物和非常相似但无害的复杂气味混合物的犬类来说,图形-背景分离是一项关键任务。在交叉实验设计中,我们评估了两种训练程序对犬类识别复杂气味混合物中关键氧化剂存在的能力的影响。在混合物训练程序中,犬类接受的气味混合物在每次试验中都有所不同,其中有的含有氧化剂,有的不含氧化剂。在更典型的犬类检测训练程序中,只向犬类呈现纯氧化剂,它们必须将其与诱饵混合物区分开来(仅目标训练)。混合物训练使犬类能够在不同背景下对氧化剂进行高于随机水平的辨别,并且犬类能够轻松地将这种表现推广到含有新气味剂的混合物中,而不会出现能力下降。然而,在仅目标训练中,当氧化剂出现在含有熟悉和/或新气味剂的混合物背景中时,命中率会急剧下降。此外,通过对仅接受目标训练的犬类进行混合物训练,它们学会了在混合物中识别氧化剂。总之,这些结果表明训练方法对气味混合物中成分的感知有重大影响,并突出了嗅觉学习对犬类有效检测自制爆炸物的重要性。