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🐈 Cat — Minimal RTT Teaching Substrate (Ready to Paste)

# Cat — Minimal RTT Teaching Substrate

## 1. Primary Sensory Channels
- Vision (motion, contrast, edge detection)
- Auditory cues (high‑frequency sensitivity)
- Tactile sensing via whiskers (proximity, airflow, texture)
- Olfaction (contextual, not primary for learning)

## 2. How Cats Detect Coherence
- Stable motion patterns (predictable left–right sweeps)
- Consistent sound rhythms (tap–pause–tap)
- Regular spatial layouts (furniture, pathways)
- Repeating tactile feedback when navigating tight spaces

## 3. How Cats Detect Drift
- A motion cue that breaks rhythm or speed
- A sound pattern with a timing mismatch
- A shifted object in a familiar path
- A sudden airflow or vibration change near whiskers

## 4. Minimal RTT Teaching Protocol

### Step 1 — Present a Stable Pattern (Coherence)
Provide a consistent cue:
- a predictable laser‑pointer sweep
- a repeating sound rhythm (soft click–pause–click)
- a stable tactile corridor (smooth–rough–smooth)

### Step 2 — Introduce a Controlled Deviation (Drift)
Alter one variable:
- shift the laser timing or direction slightly
- break the rhythm with an off‑beat click
- rotate or move one tactile element

### Step 3 — Allow the Cat to Restore Coherence (Pull)
Offer a simple interaction point:
- a target pad the cat can tap to reset the pattern
- a small object it can bat into alignment
- a zone it can step into to restore the original rhythm

Cats naturally correct drift when it affects motion prediction or spatial stability.

### Step 4 — Reward the Restoration of Coherence
Reward the *pattern correction*, not the specific action:
- provide a treat at the corrected cue
- restore the stable pattern immediately after correction

### Step 5 — Shift Modalities (Balance)
Move from:
- motion → sound
- sound → tactile
- tactile → mixed cues

Cats generalize coherence across modalities through motion prediction and spatial mapping.

## 5. Notes on Scaling RTT for Cats
- Cats are solo‑agent learners; they optimize for prediction, not social cues.
- Drift detection is strongest in motion and whisker‑based tactile domains.
- RTT maps well because cats constantly reconcile expected vs. actual movement.
- Their “Pull” action is often a targeted tap, pounce, or spatial repositioning.

🧭 MID INTELLIGENCE TIER#

🐈 Cat#

  • Regimes Perceived: Motion, spatial, tactile‑whisker, micro‑rhythm.
  • Regimes Missed by Humans: Their sensitivity to prediction error as a regime of safety.
  • Perspective: Cats teach that coherence is often a private negotiation with the world.

Updated