So my friendβs kid has celiac and dyslexia and reading labels is difficult for them (also theyβre like 7) so heβs teaching their pigeon, Grey Boy, to read the labels and identify ingredients with gluten. Itβs going well, other than Nick thought it would be a good idea to make the behavior when the pigeon does find a bad ingredient to just fuckingβ¦wing slap the box. Just beat the shit out of it like, βno! BAD gluten! BAD!β
I see a lot of βthey taught a pigeon to read?β comments and thought Iβd explain a bit more.
So itβs not really like their friendβs pigeon now knows how to read. Heβs not going to be terribly interested in a novel you hand him (unless he decides it looks like a good nest.) However pigeons are remarkably good at pattern recognition, especially visual patterns. They out-perform humans when it comes to things like identifying artwork/distinguishing between different artistβs works. So it is pretty easy for them to recognize a visual arrangement of ink, such as a printed word, and be taught to respond to that particular pattern. So when looking at an ingredient list the pigeon learns to pick out the specific pattern(s) heβs been taught to react to among the other patterns (words.)
So he sees βwheatβ and doesnβt read it the way humans do (w-h-e-a-t spells wheat), but rather sees the arrangement of pigment that he has been trained to slap. So he slaps it.
He will have to be taught every single gluten containing ingredient for it to be super useful, but it is definitely possible, which is super cool! Plus it makes a little kidβs life easier, and enriches Gray Boy.
Skinner did experiments with pigeons that showed how a pigeon can learn to respond to a visual pattern cue, if your interested more in the science behind it.
Oh yeah wasnβt there a study a while back about pigeons recognizing cancer cells from photos of cell close-ups better than doctors could?
Yeah, I shared a version of this post earlier, and this is a nice succinct explanation of how a pigeon is supposed to be βreading.β Pigeons are really good at pattern recognition, and they have great eyesight! And theyβre very trainable. There was actually a coast guard search and rescue program for years that used trained pigeons mounted in capsules under helicopters to locate shipwreck survivors in turbulent waters. They were trained to peck a button if they spotted rescue orange in the waters below the helicopter, and they did it faster and more accurately than humans by a substantial margin. The program was only discontinued when digital camera tech surpassed both humans and pigeons.
Putting a creature that can fly inside a flying machine is hilarious to me


















