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Natural selection and veridical perceptions
Authors:Justin T Mark  Brian B Marion
Institution:Department of Cognitive Science, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA
Abstract:Does natural selection favor veridical perceptions, those that more accurately depict the objective environment? Students of perception often claim that it does. But this claim, though influential, has not been adequately tested. Here we formalize the claim and a few alternatives. To test them, we introduce “interface games,” a class of evolutionary games in which perceptual strategies compete. We explore, in closed-form solutions and Monte Carlo simulations, some simpler games that assume frequency-dependent selection and complete mixing in infinite populations. We find that veridical perceptions can be driven to extinction by non-veridical strategies that are tuned to utility rather than objective reality. This suggests that natural selection need not favor veridical perceptions, and that the effects of selection on sensory perception deserve further study.
Keywords:Evolution  Replicator dynamics  Interface games  Sensation  Game theory
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