| Literature DB >> 34121802 |
Barbara A Church1,2, Brooke N Jackson1,2, J David Smith1,2.
Abstract
To explain learning, comparative researchers invoke an associative construct by which immediate reinforcement strengthens animal's adaptive responses. In contrast, cognitive researchers freely acknowledge humans' explicit-learning capability to test and confirm hypotheses even lacking direct reinforcement. We describe a new dissociative framework that may stretch animals' learning toward the explicit pole of cognition. We discuss the neuroscience of reinforcement-based learning and suggest the possibility of disabling a dominant form of reinforcement-based discrimination learning. In that vacuum, researchers may have an opportunity to observe animals' explicit learning strategies (i.e., hypotheses, rules, task self-construals). We review initial research using this framework showing explicit learning by humans and perhaps by monkeys. Finally, we consider why complementary explicit and reinforcement-based learning systems might promote evolutionary and ecological fitness. Illuminating the evolution of parallel learning systems may also tell part of the story of the emergence of humans' extraordinary capacity for explicit-declarative cognition.Entities:
Keywords: associative learning; comparative cognition; dissociative frameworks; explicit cognition; implicit learning
Year: 2020 PMID: 34121802 PMCID: PMC8192072 DOI: 10.1016/j.newideapsych.2020.100817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Ideas Psychol ISSN: 0732-118X