Liu Estella H, Mercado Eduardo, Church Barbara A, Orduña Itzel
Department of Psychology, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Buffalo NY 14260, USA.
J Comp Psychol. 2008 May;122(2):132-45. doi: 10.1037/0735-7036.122.2.132.
The authors examined whether progressively training humans and rats to perform a difficult auditory identification task led to larger improvements than extensive training with highly similar sounds (the easy-to-hard effect). Practice improved humans' ability to distinguish sounds regardless of the training regimen. However, progressively trained subjects were more accurate and showed more generalization, despite significantly less training with the stimuli that were the most difficult to distinguish. Rats showed less capacity to improve with practice but still benefited from progressive training. These findings indicate that transitioning from an easier to a more difficult task during training can facilitate, and in some cases may be essential for, auditory perceptual learning. The results are not predicted by an explanation that assumes interaction of generalized excitation and inhibition but are consistent with a hierarchical account of perceptual learning in which the representational precision required to distinguish stimuli determines the mechanisms engaged during learning.
作者研究了与使用高度相似声音进行大量训练(从易到难效应)相比,逐步训练人类和大鼠执行一项困难的听觉识别任务是否会带来更大的进步。无论训练方案如何,练习都提高了人类区分声音的能力。然而,尽管对最难区分的刺激进行的训练明显较少,但逐步训练的受试者更准确,并且表现出更强的泛化能力。大鼠通过练习提高能力的程度较小,但仍从逐步训练中受益。这些发现表明,在训练过程中从较容易的任务过渡到更困难的任务可以促进听觉感知学习,在某些情况下可能对其至关重要。这些结果无法用一种假设广义兴奋和抑制相互作用的解释来预测,但与一种感知学习的层次解释一致,即在这种解释中,区分刺激所需的表征精度决定了学习过程中所采用的机制。