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Disrupting feedback processing interferes with rule-based but not information-integration category learning
Authors:W.?Todd?Maddox  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:maddox@psy.utexas.edu."   title="  maddox@psy.utexas.edu."   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,F.?Gregory?Ashby,A.?David?Ing,Alan?D.?Pickering
Affiliation:University of Texas, Department of Psychology, Austin, Texas 78712, USA. maddox@psy.utexas.edu
Abstract:The effect of a sequentially presented memory scanning task on rule-based and information-integration category learning was investigated. On each trial in the short feedback-processing time condition, memory scanning immediately followed categorization. On each trial in the long feedback-processing time condition, categorization was followed by a 2.5-sec delay and then memory scanning. In the control condition, no memory scanning was required. Rule-based category learning was significantly worse in the short feedback-processing time condition than in the long feedback-processing time condition or control condition, whereas information-integration category learning was equivalent across conditions. In the rule-based condition, a smaller proportion of observers learned the task in the short feedback-processing time condition, and those who learned took longer to reach the performance criterion than did those in the long feedback-processing time or control condition. No differences were observed in the information integration task. These results provide support for a multiple-systems approach to category learning and argue against the validity of single-system approaches.
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