Quigley Martyn C, Eatherington Carla J, Haselgrove Mark
School of Psychology, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2019 Feb;72(2):209-221. doi: 10.1080/17470218.2017.1344258. Epub 2018 Jan 1.
When a cue reliably predicts an outcome, the associability of that cue will change. Associative theories of learning propose this change will persist even when the same cue is paired with a different outcome. These theories, however, do not extend the same privilege to an outcome; an outcome's learning history is deemed to have no bearing on subsequent new learning involving that outcome. Two experiments were conducted which sought to investigate this assumption inherent in these theories using a serial letter-prediction task. In both experiments, participants were exposed, in Stage 1, to a predictable outcome ('X') and an unpredictable outcome ('Z'). In Stage 2, participants were exposed to the same outcomes preceded by novel cues which were equally predictive of both outcomes. Both experiments revealed that participants' learning towards the previously predictable outcome was more rapid in Stage 2 than the previously unpredicted outcome. The implications of these results for theories of associative learning are discussed.
当一个线索能够可靠地预测一个结果时,该线索的可关联性将会发生变化。学习的联想理论认为,即使同一个线索与不同的结果配对,这种变化仍会持续。然而,这些理论并没有赋予结果同样的特权;一个结果的学习历史被认为与随后涉及该结果的新学习无关。进行了两项实验,旨在使用连续字母预测任务来研究这些理论中固有的这一假设。在两项实验的第一阶段,参与者都接触到一个可预测的结果(“X”)和一个不可预测的结果(“Z”)。在第二阶段,参与者接触到由同样能预测这两个结果的新线索所引导的相同结果。两项实验均表明,在第二阶段,参与者对先前可预测结果的学习比先前不可预测的结果更快。文中讨论了这些结果对联想学习理论的启示。