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The effects of distributed training on retention of operant conditioning in human infants
Authors:Mary K. Enright  Carolyn K. Rovee-Collier  Jeffrey W. Fagen  Karen Caniglia
Affiliation:Educational Testing Service USA;Rutgers University USA;St. John''s University USA;Temple University USA
Abstract:Long-term retention of operant footkicking acquired in the mobile conjugate reinforcement paradigm was assessed as a function of the distribution of training time. In the first study, 3-month-old infants were trained for either one 18-min session or for two 9-min or three 6-min sessions separated by 24-hr intervals. All infants exhibited retention during a test administered immediately after training, but only those trained in a single session continued to perform the conditioned response during cued-recall tests 7 or 14 days later. Infants trained in three sessions showed no evidence of remembering the contingency even after a week. A warm-up decrement, seen in the day-to-day performance of infants in the distributed conditions, was eliminated in the second study by the interpolation of a nonreinforcement period at the outset of daily sessions. This procedure also enhanced long-term retention such that infants trained in three 6-min session now remembered the contingency for 14 days and did not differ from infants who had received a single 18-min session. Whether distributed training facilitates or impairs long-term retention appears to depend on the opportunity for infants to acquire a sufficient number (or kind) of effective retrieval cues during original learning.
Keywords:Reprint requests should be addressed to Carolyn K. Rovee-Collier   Department of Psychology   Busch Campus   Rutgers University   New Brunswick   NJ 08903.
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