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      Newborn chickens generate invariant object representations at the onset of visual object experience.

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
      Animals, Animals, Newborn, physiology, Chickens, Cognition, Form Perception, Photic Stimulation, Recognition (Psychology), Visual Perception

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          Abstract

          To recognize objects quickly and accurately, mature visual systems build invariant object representations that generalize across a range of novel viewing conditions (e.g., changes in viewpoint). To date, however, the origins of this core cognitive ability have not yet been established. To examine how invariant object recognition develops in a newborn visual system, I raised chickens from birth for 2 weeks within controlled-rearing chambers. These chambers provided complete control over all visual object experiences. In the first week of life, subjects' visual object experience was limited to a single virtual object rotating through a 60° viewpoint range. In the second week of life, I examined whether subjects could recognize that virtual object from novel viewpoints. Newborn chickens were able to generate viewpoint-invariant representations that supported object recognition across large, novel, and complex changes in the object's appearance. Thus, newborn visual systems can begin building invariant object representations at the onset of visual object experience. These abstract representations can be generated from sparse data, in this case from a visual world containing a single virtual object seen from a limited range of viewpoints. This study shows that powerful, robust, and invariant object recognition machinery is an inherent feature of the newborn brain.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          23918372
          3752245
          10.1073/pnas.1308246110

          Chemistry
          Animals,Animals, Newborn,physiology,Chickens,Cognition,Form Perception,Photic Stimulation,Recognition (Psychology),Visual Perception

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