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Predictability, surprise, attention, and conditioning

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TLDR
The role of attention in Pavlovian conditioning, and use of auditory and visual stimuli to condition rats is discussed in this article, where the authors discuss the use of both visual and auditory stimuli.
Abstract
Role of attention in Pavlovian conditioning, and use of auditory and visual stimuli to condition rats

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Comprehension without segmentation: a proof of concept with naive discriminative learning

TL;DR: A computational model is presented that does not seek to learn word forms, but instead decodes the experiences discriminated by the speech input and shows that this new discriminative perspective on auditory comprehension is consistent with young infants' sensitivity to the statistical structure of the input.
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Autocontingencies: A Model for Subtle Behavioral Control.

TL;DR: The concept of autocontingencies was first proposed by as discussed by the authors, who examined the behavioral control of Pavlovian conditioning procedures with both appetitive and aversive stimuli and found that subjects are able to find "safety" in more subtle features of the experimental situation.
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The olfactory memory of the honeybee Apis mellifera. III. Bilateral sensory input is necessary for induction and expression of olfactory blocking.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the mechanistic basis for olfactory blocking in the honeybee and found that removing input from one antenna eliminates the blocking of one odor by another.
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Conditioned blocking and schizophrenia: a replication and study of the role of symptoms, age, onset-age of psychosis and illness-duration.

TL;DR: It is suggested that reduced CB on initial test-trials in nonparanoid schizophrenia reflects the unusual persistence of controlled information processing strategies that would normally become automatic during conditioning.
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Temporal integration and temporal backward associations in human and nonhuman subjects.

TL;DR: Two experiments are reported that demonstrate temporal integration of independently acquired temporal relationships, including backward associations, in both human (Experiment 1) and nonhuman (rats, Experiment 2) subjects.