| Literature DB >> 34855434 |
Greg Jensen1, Fabian Munoz1, Anna Meaney1, Herbert S Terrace2, Vincent P Ferrera1.
Abstract
Rhesus macaques, when trained for several hundred trials on adjacent items in an ordered list (e.g., A > B, B > C, C > D), are able to make accurate transitive inferences (TI) about previously untrained pairs (e.g., A > C, B > D). How that learning unfolds during training, however, is not well understood. We sought to measure the relationship between the amount of TI training and the resulting response accuracy in 4 rhesus macaques using seven-item lists. The training conditions included the absolute minimal case of presenting each of the six adjacent pairs only once prior to testing. We also tested transfer to nonadjacent pairs with 24 and 114 training trials. Because performance during and after small amounts of training is expected to be near chance levels, we developed a descriptive statistical model to estimate potentially subtle learning effects in the presence of much larger random response variability and systematic bias. These results suggest that subjects learned serial order in an incremental fashion. Thus, rather than performing transitive inference by a logical process, serial learning in rhesus macaques proceeds in a manner more akin to a statistical inference, with an initial uncertainty about list position that gradually becomes more accurate as evidence accumulates. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34855434 PMCID: PMC8647760 DOI: 10.1037/xan0000298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Psychol Anim Learn Cogn ISSN: 2329-8456 Impact factor: 2.088