Literature DB >> 11947995

Input coding in animal and human associative learning.

Douglas A. Williams1, Daniel S. Braker.   

Abstract

Two appetitive conditioning experiments with rats investigated whether the degree of generalization between a compound and its component parts is fixed or variable. Both experiments used a two-stage transfer design. In Stage 1, the elemental groups learned that a compound and its component parts signaled the same outcome (i.e. C+, D+, CD+), whereas the configural groups learned that a compound and its component parts signaled different outcomes (i.e. C+, D+, CD-, where '+' is pellets and '-' is no pellets). In Stage 2, the rats were tested for reductions in generalization. Experiment 1 found no evidence that past configural learning reduced generalization when a new set of alike-treated A and B elements were presented in compound for the first time. Experiment 2 found no evidence that past configural learning reduced generalization when the stimuli of Stage 1 were presented in a new C-, D-, CD+ relation. In contrast to findings with humans, these results suggest that past experience plays a minor role in how stimuli are encoded in animal conditioning.

Entities:  

Year:  2002        PMID: 11947995     DOI: 10.1016/s0376-6357(02)00011-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Processes        ISSN: 0376-6357            Impact factor:   1.777


  7 in total

1.  Reasoning rats: forward blocking in Pavlovian animal conditioning is sensitive to constraints of causal inference.

Authors:  Tom Beckers; Ralph R Miller; Jan De Houwer; Kouji Urushihara
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  2006-02

2.  Rats are sensitive to ambiguity.

Authors:  Cynthia D Fast; Aaron P Blaisdell
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2011-12

3.  Potentiation and overshadowing in Pavlovian fear conditioning.

Authors:  Gonzalo P Urcelay; Ralph R Miller
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process       Date:  2009-07

Review 4.  On the generality and limits of abstraction in rats and humans.

Authors:  Gonzalo P Urcelay; Ralph R Miller
Journal:  Anim Cogn       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 3.084

5.  The effect of subadditive pretraining on blocking: limits on generalization.

Authors:  Daniel S Wheeler; Tom Beckers; Ralph R Miller
Journal:  Learn Behav       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 1.986

6.  Imagine that! Cue-evoked representations guide rat behavior during ambiguous situations.

Authors:  Cynthia D Fast; Traci Biedermann; Aaron P Blaisdell
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Anim Learn Cogn       Date:  2016-02-15       Impact factor: 2.478

7.  Learning history and cholinergic modulation in the dorsal hippocampus are necessary for rats to infer the status of a hidden event.

Authors:  Cynthia D Fast; M Melissa Flesher; Nathanial A Nocera; Michael S Fanselow; Aaron P Blaisdell
Journal:  Hippocampus       Date:  2016-01-20       Impact factor: 3.899

  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.