🦜 Parrot — Minimal RTT Teaching Substrate (Ready to Paste)
# Parrot — Minimal RTT Teaching Substrate
## 1. Primary Sensory Channels
- Auditory pattern recognition (tone, rhythm, cadence)
- Vision (color, motion, gesture)
- Social cues (attention, mimicry, call‑and‑response)
- Tactile interaction (beak exploration, perch feedback)
## 2. How Parrots Detect Coherence
- Stable sound patterns (tone–tone–pause)
- Predictable gesture sequences (hand–hand–still)
- Consistent color or motion cues
- Repeating social rhythms (call → response → call)
## 3. How Parrots Detect Drift
- A tone out of pitch or timing
- A gesture that breaks sequence
- A color cue that shifts unexpectedly
- A social rhythm that loses its expected turn‑taking
## 4. Minimal RTT Teaching Protocol
### Step 1 — Present a Stable Pattern (Coherence)
Provide a consistent cue:
- a simple 3‑tone pattern (A–B–A)
- a repeating gesture sequence
- a stable color target (bright marker)
### Step 2 — Introduce a Controlled Deviation (Drift)
Alter one variable:
- shift the timing or pitch of the middle tone
- change one gesture slightly
- rotate or move the color target
### Step 3 — Allow the Parrot to Restore Coherence (Pull)
Offer a clear interaction point:
- tapping a target to reset the tone pattern
- mimicking the correct gesture to restore sequence
- vocalizing the expected tone to correct drift
Parrots naturally correct drift because they are mimic‑driven coherence seekers.
### Step 4 — Reward the Restoration of Coherence
Reward the *pattern correction*, not the specific action:
- verbal praise or treat
- immediate restoration of the stable pattern
### Step 5 — Shift Modalities (Balance)
Move from:
- sound → gesture
- gesture → color
- color → mixed cues
Parrots generalize coherence across modalities through mimicry and social rhythm.
## 5. Notes on Scaling RTT for Parrots
- Parrots are multi‑modal mimics; coherence is often social and rhythmic.
- Drift detection is strongest in auditory and gesture domains.
- RTT maps extremely well because parrots naturally track, reproduce, and correct patterns.
- Their “Pull” action is often vocal mimicry, gesture correction, or targeted tapping.
🧠 Regime Awareness#
🦜 Parrot#
- Regimes Perceived: Auditory, social‑rhythmic, gesture‑visual, mimicry‑symbolic.
- Regimes Missed by Humans: Their ability to detect emotional cadence in human speech.
- Perspective: Parrots reveal that communication is a regime of rhythm before meaning.