Author:
Jin Yuhao,Jensen Greg,Gottlieb Jacqueline,Ferrera Vincent P.
Abstract
ABSTRACTSurvival depends on identifying learnable features of the environment that predict reward, and avoiding others that are random and unlearnable. However, humans and other animals often infer spurious associations among unrelated events, raising the question of how well they can distinguish learnable patterns from unlearnable events. Here, we tasked monkeys with discovering the serial order of two pictorial sets: a “learnable” set in which the stimuli were implicitly ordered and monkeys were rewarded for choosing the higher-rank stimulus and an “unlearnable” set in which stimuli were unordered and feedback was random regardless of the choice. We replicated prior results that monkeys reliably learned the implicit order of the learnable set. Surprisingly, the monkeys behaved as though some ordering also existed in the unlearnable set, showing consistent choice preference that transferred to novel untrained pairs in this set, even under a preference-discouraging reward schedule that gave rewards more frequently to the stimulus that was selected less often. In simulations, a model-free RL algorithm (Q-learning) displayed a degree of consistent ordering among the unlearnable set but, unlike the monkeys, failed to do so under the preference, discouraging reward schedule. Our results suggest that monkeys infer abstract structures from objectively random events using heuristics that extend beyond stimulus-outcome conditional learning to more cognitive model-based learning mechanisms.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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