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Situational cues and correlation between CS and US as determinants of the conditioned emotional response

Carol S. Dweck, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1970 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 3, pp 145-147
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TLDR
In this article, the authors show that the degree of conditioning to a CS depends upon the associative strength of the constellation of cues in which the CS is imbedded during training, and that Ss treatment with respect to "situational" cues is important in the determination of CS-US contingency effects.
Abstract
Administering unsignaled USs during daily CER training sessions interfered with CER conditioning, as has frequently been reported. This effect was reduced, however, when additional daily sessions were administered during which Ss were simply exposed to the experimental environment in the absence of the CS and US. The results indicate that S’s treatment with respect to “situational” cues is important in the determination of CS-US contingency effects, and are in agreement with recent formulations of Wagner (in press, a) and Rescorla (in press) which emphasize that the degree of conditioning to a CS depends upon the associative strength of the constellation of cues in which the CS is imbedded during training.

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Précis of The Neuropsychology of Anxiety: An Enquiry into the Functions of the Septo-Hippocampal System..

TL;DR: It is proposed that these drugs reduce anxiety by impairing the functioning of a widespread neural system including the septo-hippocampal system (SHS), the Papez circuit, the prefrontal cortex, and ascending monoaminergic and cholinergic pathways which innervate these forebrain structures.
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Judgment of contingency in depressed and nondepressed students: sadder but wiser?

TL;DR: In this article, the learned helplessness theory of depression was used to predict the degree of contingency between responses and outcomes relative to the objective degree of contingencies, and the predicted subjective judgments of contingency were surprisingly accurate in all four experiments.
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Contextual control of the extinction of conditioned fear: tests for the associative value of the context.

TL;DR: The results suggest that fear of an extinguished CS can be affected by the excitatory strength of the context but that independently demonstrable contextual excitation or inhibition is not necessary for contexts to control that fear.
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Assessment of covariation by humans and animals: The joint influence of prior expectations and current situational information.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a theoretical framework for understanding and integrating people's and animals' covariation assessment, which is determined by the interaction between two sources of information: the organism's prior expectations about the covariation between two events and current situational information provided by the environment about the objective contingency between the events.
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Role of conditioned contextual stimuli in reinstatement of extinguished fear.

TL;DR: The results do not support the hypothesis that reinstatement results from an increment in the strength of a memory of the US that has been weakened during extinction, and problems inherent in controlling and detecting levels of context conditioning that may influence behavior toward nominal CSs are discussed.
References
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Predictability, surprise, attention, and conditioning

TL;DR: 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.
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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.
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Probability of shock in the presence and absence of CS in fear conditioning.

TL;DR: 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.
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.
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