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Common elements enhance or retard negative patterning discrimination learning depending on modality of stimuli

Common elements enhance or retard negative patterning discrimination learning depending on modality of stimuli
Common elements enhance or retard negative patterning discrimination learning depending on modality of stimuli
Human contingency learning studies were used to compare the predictions of configural and elemental theories. In two experiments, participants were required to learn which stimuli were associated with an increase in core temperature of a fictitious nuclear plant. Experiments investigated the rate at which a simple Negative Patterning discrimination (A+ B+ ABø) was learned compared to one containing a common but irrelevant element (CD+ CE+ CDEø). When the three elements were from separate modalities (Visual, Auditory and Tactile) the common element enhanced the rate at which the discrimination was learned. When stimuli were drawn from a single modality (Visual) the common element disrupted learning. A single elemental model, Harris and Livesey’s (2010) attention modulated associative network, was shown to predict both sets of results as the model predicts elements from the same modality attenuate summation. In Experiment 2, the common element was separately paired with a consistent outcome (Co) and the effect of the common element within the discrimination was found to be removed, again in line with the predictions of Harris and Livesy (2010).
human contingency learning, negative patterning discrimination, associative learning models, modality
0023-9690
Redhead, Edward S.
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
Curtis, C.
e86c8e4e-9d89-4381-866d-df48af5bf8be
Redhead, Edward S.
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
Curtis, C.
e86c8e4e-9d89-4381-866d-df48af5bf8be

Redhead, Edward S. and Curtis, C. (2012) Common elements enhance or retard negative patterning discrimination learning depending on modality of stimuli. Learning and Motivation. (doi:10.1016/j.lmot.2012.05.001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Human contingency learning studies were used to compare the predictions of configural and elemental theories. In two experiments, participants were required to learn which stimuli were associated with an increase in core temperature of a fictitious nuclear plant. Experiments investigated the rate at which a simple Negative Patterning discrimination (A+ B+ ABø) was learned compared to one containing a common but irrelevant element (CD+ CE+ CDEø). When the three elements were from separate modalities (Visual, Auditory and Tactile) the common element enhanced the rate at which the discrimination was learned. When stimuli were drawn from a single modality (Visual) the common element disrupted learning. A single elemental model, Harris and Livesey’s (2010) attention modulated associative network, was shown to predict both sets of results as the model predicts elements from the same modality attenuate summation. In Experiment 2, the common element was separately paired with a consistent outcome (Co) and the effect of the common element within the discrimination was found to be removed, again in line with the predictions of Harris and Livesy (2010).

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Published date: 20 June 2012
Keywords: human contingency learning, negative patterning discrimination, associative learning models, modality

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 339776
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/339776
ISSN: 0023-9690
PURE UUID: 7a940e0f-d5e0-4b14-b97e-0b8eb72b675e
ORCID for Edward S. Redhead: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7771-1228

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Date deposited: 25 Jun 2012 14:05
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:07

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Author: C. Curtis

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