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Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of generalization decrement on the outcome of a feature-positive discrimination

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors compared the results of feature-positive discrimination when using a light or a tone as the feature positive stimulus, B, and found that the tone elicited a stronger conditioned response than the light when it was presented alone.
Abstract
In a feature-positive discrimination subjects receive training in which reinforced presentations of a compound, AB+, are intermixed among non-reinforced presentations of one element, Ao. The three reported experiments compared the results of this procedure when using a light or a tone as the feature-positive stimulus, B. In all three experiments, the tone elicited a stronger conditioned response than the light when it was presented alone. The main concern of Experiments 2 and 3 was to examine whether this effect was due to training being incomplete for subjects receiving the light as the B element. In Experiment 2 it was found that extended discrimination training did not diminish the difference between the properties of the light and the tone. Experiment 3 revealed that this effect was not due to differences in the asymptotic associative strength of either A or the compound. It is argued that these results are not readily compatible with contemporary theories of learning, and an alternative account is presented.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A model for stimulus generalization in Pavlovian conditioning.

TL;DR: A selective review of experiments that can be said to demonstrate the effects of generalization decrement in Pavlovian condition is presented, and it is argued that an adequate theoretical explanation for them is currently not available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Similarity and Discrimination: A Selective Review and a Connectionist Model

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the extent to which two elemental theories of conditioning, stimulus sampling theory and the Rescorla-Wagner (1972) theory, are able to account for the influence of similarity on discrimination learning.
Book ChapterDOI

Occasion Setting in Pavlovian Conditioning

TL;DR: This chapter is concerned with a particular modulatory function of CSs in rats solutions of elementary conditional discriminations, in which one CS modifies the efficacy of Pavlovian associations between other cues and the US.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation and development of a connectionist theory of configural learning

TL;DR: A configural theory of associative learning is described that is based on the assumption that conditioning results in associations between the unconditioned stimulus and a representation of the entire pattern of stimulation that was present prior to its delivery.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A model for Pavlovian learning: Variations in the effectiveness of conditioned but not of unconditioned stimuli.

TL;DR: A new model is proposed that deals with the explanation of cases in which learning does not occur in spite of the fact that the conditioned stimulus is a signal for the reinforcer by specifying that certain procedures cause a conditioned stimulus to lose effectiveness.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of Attention: Variations in the Associability of Stimuli with Reinforcement

TL;DR: Overshadowing and blocking are better explained by the choice of an appropriate rule for changing a, such that a decreases to stimuli that signal no change from the probability of reinforcement predicted by other stimuli.