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Value transmission in discrimination learning involving stimulus chains.
Authors:B A Williams
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0109, USA. bawilliams@ucsd.edu
Abstract:Rats learned a series of reversals of a positional discrimination in which responses to one lever led to delayed food and responses to a second lever led to no food. Interpolated within the delays leading to the different outcomes were two-link stimulus chains. The pairing of each stimulus element with the delayed outcome of food or no food varied across reversals. Either stimulus element could have the same correlation with outcome as occurred on the preceding reversal or the opposite correlation as on the preceding reversal. New reversals were acquired more quickly when both stimulus elements had the same status as during the preceding reversal, and were acquired most slowly when both stimulus elements had the opposite status as that of the preceding reversal. The rate of learning was intermediate when only one of the stimulus elements had the same status as that during the preceding reversal. All of the data are compatible with an interpretation in terms of backward chaining of stimulus value.
Keywords:chain schedules  conditioned reinforcement  delay of reinforcement  discrimination learning  lever press  rats
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