The Statistics of the Environment Affect the Functional Architecture of Vision in Adulthood: A Reduce d Alphanumeric Category Effect in Canadian Mail Sorters
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The Statistics of the Environment Affect the Functional Architecture of Vision in Adulthood: A Reduce d Alphanumeric Category Effect in Canadian Mail Sorters

Abstract

Letters are detected more efficiently among digits than among letters. This alphanumeric category effect suggests an architectural distinction between letter and number representation in human vision and dissociations between letter and number recognition following brain damage support this interpretation. Because letter and number recognition are not innate, this implies that experience can shape the functional architecture of vision. A possible explanation is that letters co-occur with letters in the environment while numbers co-occur with numbers; such statistics cause segregation of letter and number representations in artificial neural networks. To test the general hypothesis that environmental statistics affect the architecture of vision, and the specific hypothesis that within-category cooccurrence causes the alphanumeric category effect, we measured the effect in foreign mail sorters who process Canadian zip codes (which violate the co-occurrence statistics) and in control subjects. As predicted, foreign mail sorters showed a smaller category effect

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