Literature DB >> 25425296

Transfer of absolute and relative predictiveness in human contingency learning.

Florian Kattner1.   

Abstract

Previous animal-learning studies have shown that the effect of the predictive history of a cue on its associability depends on whether priority was set to the absolute or relative predictiveness of that cue. The present study tested this assumption in a human contingency-learning task. In both experiments, one group of participants was trained with predictive and nonpredictive cues that were presented according to an absolute-predictiveness principle (either continuously or partially reinforced cue configurations), whereas a second group was trained with co-occurring cues that differed in predictiveness (emphasizing the relative predictive validity of the cues). In both groups, later test discriminations were learned more readily if the discriminative cues had been predictive in the previous learning stage than if they had been nonpredictive. These results imply that both the absolute and relative predictiveness of a cue lead positive transfer with regard to its associability. The data are discussed with respect to attentional models of associative learning.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25425296     DOI: 10.3758/s13420-014-0159-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Learn Behav        ISSN: 1543-4494            Impact factor:   1.986


  24 in total

1.  Learned associability and associative change in human causal learning.

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3.  A lifespan database of adult facial stimuli.

Authors:  Meredith Minear; Denise C Park
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4.  The effect of predictive history on the learning of sub-sequence contingencies.

Authors:  T Beesley; M E Le Pelley
Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)       Date:  2009-06-18       Impact factor: 2.143

5.  A configural theory of attention and associative learning.

Authors:  David N George; John M Pearce
Journal:  Learn Behav       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 1.986

6.  The strength of the orienting response during Pavlovian conditioning.

Authors:  H Kaye; J M Pearce
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process       Date:  1984-01

7.  Overt attention and predictiveness in human contingency learning.

Authors:  M E Le Pelley; Tom Beesley; Oren Griffiths
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process       Date:  2011-04

8.  Acquired distinctiveness and equivalence in human discrimination learning: evidence for an attentional process.

Authors:  Charlotte Bonardi; Steven Graham; Geoffrey Hall; Chris Mitchell
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2005-02

9.  Revisiting Snodgrass and Vanderwart's object pictorial set: the role of surface detail in basic-level object recognition.

Authors:  Bruno Rossion; Gilles Pourtois
Journal:  Perception       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 1.490

10.  Attention and expectation in human predictive learning: the role of uncertainty.

Authors:  Lee Hogarth; Anthony Dickinson; Alison Austin; Craig Brown; Theodora Duka
Journal:  Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)       Date:  2008-11       Impact factor: 2.143

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