scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Probability of shock in the presence and absence of CS in fear conditioning.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
2 experiments indicate that CS-US contingency is an important determinant of fear conditioning and that presentation of US in the absence of CS interferes with fear conditioning.
Abstract
2 experiments indicate that CS-US contingency is an important determinant of fear conditioning and that presentation of US in the absence of CS interferes with fear conditioning. In Experiment 1, equal probability of a shock US in the presence and absence of a tone CS produced no CER suppression to CS; the same probability of US given only during CS produced substantial conditioning. In Experiment 2, which explored 4 different probabilities of US in the presence and absence of CS, amount of conditioning was higher the greater the probability of US during CS and was lower the greater the probability of US in the absence of CS; when the 2 probabilities were equal, no conditioning resulted. Two conceptions of Pavlovian conditioning have been distinguished by Rescorla (1967). The first, and more traditional, notion emphasizes the role of the number of pairings of CS and US in the formation of a CR. The second notion suggests that it is the contingency between CS and US which is important. The notion of contingency differs from that of pairing in that it includes not only what events are paired but also what events are not paired. As used here, contingency refers to the relative probability of occurrence of US in the presence of CS as contrasted with its probability in the absence of CS. The contingency notion suggests that, in fact, conditioning only occurs when these probabilities differ; when the probability of US is higher during CS than at other times, excitatory conditioning occurs; when the probability is lower, inhibitory conditioning results. Notice that the probability of a US can be the same in the absence and presence of CS and yet there can be a fair number of CS-US pairings. It is this that makes it possible to assess the relative importance of pairing and contingency in the development of a CR. Several experiments have pointed to the usefulness of the contingency notion. Rescorla (1966) reported a Pavlovian 1This research was supported by Grants MH13415-01 from the National Institute of Mental Health and GB-6493 from the National Science Foundation, as well as by funds from Yale University.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Dissertation

Bases comportementales et génétiques des apprentissages aversif et appétitif chez l'abeille, Apis mellifera

Pierre Junca
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the role of HsTRPA in the detection of the temperature of an ABEIL in the presence of a Hs-TRPA.

Invariance seeking action: Acquisition and blocking effects of causal attribution in the workplace

Abstract: A social analog of a short-delay conditioning paradigm in Pavlovian learning was used to test predictions concerning the influence of stimulus context of human social judgments of causality. The learning experiments was masked by describing it as a study testing a computerized employee evaluation system. Subjects were presented information about a hypothetical worker and a fictitious company's level of productivity representing a 12 or 18 month period. Consistent with contemporary models of associative learning, the results indicated that the subjects judgments of the worker's causal priority for the company productivity effect progressively strengthened as a function of repeated workerproductivity pairings. Further, limits of this acquisition effect of causal judgments were influenced by the ability of another worker to predict similar productivity level information. Implications for future research including unblocking and augmenting are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Retrorubral field is a hub for diverse threat and aversive outcome signals.

TL;DR: In this paper, the retrorubral field (RRF), a midbrain region containing A8 dopamine, was found to be a neural origin of adaptive fear signals for threat and aversive outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Norwegians Don’t Have Their Pigs in the Forest: Enlightening the Nordic Art of ‘Co-operation’

TL;DR: In this article, a two-step approach to shed light on the Nordic cultural-evolutionary puzzle of managing to maintain a dynamic equilibrium between competition and cooperation is presented. And the authors suggest regarding cooperation as a valuable temporally extended pattern of behavior that may be learned and maintained over an individual's lifetime, and examine how Norwegian and Swedish culture fosters a commitment to extended patterns of cooperative behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conditioned suppression in the adult rat following chronic exposure to lead

TL;DR: T Tone presentations were observed to be significantly more disruptive of operant steady state responding for treated subjects as compared to controls, which supports earlier claims that lead exposure enhances emotionality.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Pavlovian Conditioning and Its Proper Control Procedures

TL;DR: This "truly random" control procedure leads to a new conception of Pavlovian conditioning postulating that the contingency between CS and US, rather than the pairing of CS andUS, is the important event in conditioning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictability and number of pairings in Pavlovian fear conditioning

TL;DR: In this paper, three groups of dogs were trained with different kinds of Pavlovian fear conditioning for three different types of dogs: randomly and independently; for a second group, CSs predicted the occurrence of USs; and for a third group, S predicted the absence of the USs.
Journal ArticleDOI

A traditional demonstration of the active properties of Pavlovian inhibition using differential CER

TL;DR: Rats in an experimental group were given 30 trials of differential CER and then the CS+ and CS− were combined during CER extinction, resulting in less suppression for the experimental group than shown by a control group, interpreted as a demonstration of the active inhibitory properties of CS−.