Differential impact of relevant and irrelevant dimension primes on rule-based and information-integration category learning |
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Authors: | Lisa R. Grimm W. Todd Maddox |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, The College of New Jersey, USA;2. Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, USA |
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Abstract: | Research has identified multiple category-learning systems with each being “tuned” for learning categories with different task demands and each governed by different neurobiological systems. Rule-based (RB) classification involves testing verbalizable rules for category membership while information-integration (II) classification requires the implicit learning of stimulus–response mappings. In the first study to directly test rule priming with RB and II category learning, we investigated the influence of the availability of information presented at the beginning of the task. Participants viewed lines that varied in length, orientation, and position on the screen, and were primed to focus on stimulus dimensions that were relevant or irrelevant to the correct classification rule. In Experiment 1, we used an RB category structure, and in Experiment 2, we used an II category structure. Accuracy and model-based analyses suggested that a focus on relevant dimensions improves RB task performance later in learning while a focus on an irrelevant dimension improves II task performance early in learning. |
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Keywords: | 2300 Human Experimental Psychology 2340 Cognitive Processes 2343 Learning & Memory |
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