Pickens Charles L, Holland Peter C
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2004 Nov;28(7):651-61. doi: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2004.09.003.
Animals' abilities to use internal representations of absent objects to guide adaptive behavior and acquire new information, and to represent multiple spatial, temporal, and object properties of complex events and event sequences, may underlie many aspects of human perception, memory, and symbolic thought. In this review, two classes of simple associative learning tasks that address these core cognitive capacities are discussed. The first set, including reinforcer revaluation and mediated learning procedures, address the power of Pavlovian conditioned stimuli to gain access, through learning, to representations of upcoming events. The second set of investigations concern the construction of complex stimulus representations, as illustrated in studies of contextual learning, the conjunction of explicit stimulus elements in configural learning procedures, and recent studies of episodic-like memory. The importance of identifying both cognitive process and brain system bases of performance in animal models is emphasized.
动物利用不存在物体的内部表征来指导适应性行为并获取新信息,以及表征复杂事件和事件序列的多种空间、时间和物体属性的能力,可能是人类感知、记忆和符号思维诸多方面的基础。在本综述中,将讨论两类针对这些核心认知能力的简单联想学习任务。第一组任务,包括强化物再评估和中介学习程序,涉及经典条件刺激通过学习获取即将发生事件表征的能力。第二组研究涉及复杂刺激表征的构建,如情境学习研究、构型学习程序中明确刺激元素的结合以及近期类情景记忆研究所示。强调了在动物模型中识别认知过程和表现的脑系统基础的重要性。