Today’s Question: Is the new Assisted Culling feature in Lightroom Classic suitable for bird and wildlife photography? Your comments have referred to using it for people photography, but wouldn’t it then work well for animals?
Tim’s Quick Answer: The Assisted Culling feature in Lightroom Classic is not currently a good option if you want to use the eye detection features for birds or wildlife, but it is still usable when it comes to evaluating whether the subject is in focus.
More Detail: The Assisted Culling feature in Lightroom Classic provides a tool for evaluating images to help you more quickly identify favorite versus outtake photos. The options for evaluating whether the eye is in focus and that the eyes are open, however, are specifically intended for photos of people in the current iteration.
At the moment, Assisted Culling is mostly focused on evaluating photos of people, not birds or animals. But that mostly relates to the two options for evaluating the eyes. The Subject Focus feature will work for photos that do not contain a person but that contain a key subject that stands out clearly or a wider scene where there is distinct sharpness and detail.
Over time, I am confident that Adobe will update the Assisted Culling feature so it is more useful across a broad range of photographic subjects. It has already proven quite helpful when it comes to evaluating a large number of portraits, for example, so you can more quickly narrow the photos to those you are most likely to consider favorites. I’m sure the image analysis will continue to improve, and to expand to be useful to a wider range of photographers.

