Leveling-Sharpening and Representational Learning

1970 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 211-214
Author(s):  
Donald Fitzgerald ◽  
Heungim O. Hong

Performance of college students on the Squares Test was related to immediate and delayed recognition of unfamiliar concept names in a representational learning task. Although previous research has not substantiated predictions from the assimilation model when the task involved associative learning, the present study clearly indicated ( p < .01) the superiority of “sharpeners” to “levelers” in representational learning with the stimulus phrases embedded in prose material and low-meaning response terms.

Author(s):  
Tom Beckers ◽  
Uschi Van den Broeck ◽  
Marij Renne ◽  
Stefaan Vandorpe ◽  
Jan De Houwer ◽  
...  

Abstract. In a contingency learning task, 4-year-old and 8-year-old children had to predict the outcome displayed on the back of a card on the basis of cues presented on the front. The task was embedded in either a causal or a merely predictive scenario. Within this task, either a forward blocking or a backward blocking procedure was implemented. Blocking occurred in the causal but not in the predictive scenario. Moreover, blocking was affected by the scenario to the same extent in both age groups. The pattern of results was similar for forward and backward blocking. These results suggest that even young children are sensitive to the causal structure of a contingency learning task and that the occurrence of blocking in such a task defies an explanation in terms of associative learning theory.


Author(s):  
Felicity Muth ◽  
Amber D Tripodi ◽  
Rene Bonilla ◽  
James P Strange ◽  
Anne S Leonard

Abstract Females and males often face different sources of selection, resulting in dimorphism in morphological, physiological, and even cognitive traits. Sex differences are often studied in respect to spatial cognition, yet the different ecological roles of males and females might shape cognition in multiple ways. For example, in dietary generalist bumblebees (Bombus), the ability to learn associations is critical to female workers, who face informationally rich foraging scenarios as they collect nectar and pollen from thousands of flowers over a period of weeks to months to feed the colony. While male bumblebees likely need to learn associations as well, they only forage for themselves while searching for potential mates. It is thus less clear whether foraging males would benefit from the same associative learning performance as foraging females. In this system, as in others, cognitive performance is typically studied in lab-reared animals under captive conditions, which may not be representative of patterns in the wild. In the first test of sex and species differences in cognition using wild bumblebees, we compared the performance of Bombus vancouverensis nearcticus (formerly bifarius) and Bombus vosnesenskii of both sexes on an associative learning task at Sierra Nevada (CA) field sites. Across both species, we found that males and females did not differ in their ability to learn, although males were slower to respond to the sucrose reward. These results offer the first evidence from natural populations that male bumblebees may be equally as able to learn associations as females, supporting findings from captive colonies of commercial bees. The observed interspecific variation in learning ability opens the door to using the Bombus system to test hypotheses about comparative cognition.


NeuroImage ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 692
Author(s):  
Yukiko Kikuchi-Yorioka ◽  
Toshiyuki Sawaguchi ◽  
Jun Okamoto ◽  
Satoru Miyauchi

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jayne Morriss ◽  
Nicolo Biagi ◽  
Tina B. Lonsdorf ◽  
Marta Andreatta

AbstractIndividuals, who score high in self-reported intolerance of uncertainty (IU), tend to find uncertainty anxiety-provoking. IU has been reliably associated with disrupted threat extinction. However, it remains unclear whether IU would be related to disrupted extinction to other arousing stimuli that are not threatening (i.e., rewarding). We addressed this question by conducting a reward associative learning task with acquisition and extinction training phases (n = 58). Throughout the associative learning task, we recorded valence ratings (i.e. liking), skin conductance response (SCR) (i.e. sweating), and corrugator supercilii activity (i.e. brow muscle indicative or negative and positive affect) to learned reward and neutral cues. During acquisition training with partial reward reinforcement, higher IU was associated with greater corrugator supercilii activity to neutral compared to reward cues. IU was not related to valence ratings or SCR’s during the acquisition or extinction training phases. These preliminary results suggest that IU-related deficits during extinction may be limited to situations with threat. The findings further our conceptual understanding of IU’s role in the associative learning and extinction of reward, and in relation to the processing of threat and reward more generally.


Neurosurgery ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 64 (CN_suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 281-281
Author(s):  
Sarah KB Bick ◽  
Shaun Patel ◽  
Emad N Eskandar

Abstract INTRODUCTION Associative learning is the process whereby a connection is formed between a sensory cue and an outcome resulting from a behavioral response. This process allows us to learn to adapt and optimally respond to a changing environment. Primate research has demonstrated that the caudate nucleus is involved in associative learning and contains information encoding whether a response was correct or incorrect. Our objective was to determine whether correlates of learning are present in the human caudate nucleus and to differentiate between learning and reward related signaling. METHODS Five subjects who underwent depth electrode placement for seizure localization for medically refractory epilepsy were included in our study. Two behavioral tasks were performed while intracranial local field potentials were recorded from the implanted electrodes. A learning task required subjects to learn an association between a series of presented images and a button press. A gambling task required subjects to place a wager on the outcome of a simulated card game. We computed power in caudate electrodes and compared power during the feedback epoch of the task between correct and incorrect trials for the learning task and between winning and losing trials for the gambling task. RESULTS >There was a significant increase in beta (15-30Hz) power during the feedback epoch of the learning task, with significant differences between beta power following correct versus incorrect responses. Conversely, no difference in beta power was seen during the feedback epoch of the gambling task between winning and losing trials. CONCLUSION Changes in beta power were seen in the caudate nucleus that differed between correct and incorrect trials in a learning task. No correlate was seen in a gambling task, suggesting that this signal is related specifically to learning rather than to reward.


2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather MacKenzie ◽  
Susan A. Graham ◽  
Suzanne Curtin

2010 ◽  
Vol 35 (13) ◽  
pp. 2502-2509 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Evans ◽  
Sukhwinder S Shergill ◽  
Bruno B Averbeck

1985 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Paul Szalai

A significant overlearning reversal effect was found in an experiment using number classification by oddness-evenness as the learning task, 19 college students and graduates as subjects, and both positive and negative verbal feedback as the reinforcer. A randomized two-group design was used. The importance of the dimensional complexity of the learning task in experiments producing overlearning reversal effect is discussed.


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