Function transformation without reinforcement |
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Authors: | Tonneau Franćois Arreola Fara Martínez Alma Gabriela |
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Affiliation: | Centro de Estudios de Alcoholismo y Adicciones, Antigua Escuela de Medicina, 3er Piso, Calle Hospital 320, CP 44280, Guadalajara, Jalisco, México. ftonneau@cencar.udg.mx |
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Abstract: | In studies of function transformation, participants initially are taught to match stimuli in the presence of a contextual cue, X; the stimuli to be matched bear some formal relation to each other, for example, a relation of opposition or difference. In a second phase, the participants are taught to match arbitrary stimuli (say, A and B) in the presence of X. In a final test, A often displays behavioral functions that differ from those of B, and can be predicted from the nature of the relation associated with X in the initial training phase. Here we report function-transformation effects in the absence of selection responses and of their reinforcers. In three experiments with college students, exposure to relations of difference or identity modified the responses given to later stimuli. In Experiment 1, responses to a test stimulus A varied depending on preexposure to pairs of colors that were distinct from A but exemplified relations of difference or identity. In Experiment 2, a stimulus A acquired distinct functions, depending on its previous pairing with a contextual cue X that had itself been paired with identity or difference among colors. Experiment 3 confirmed the results of Experiment 2 with a modified design. Our data are consistent with the notion that relations of identity or difference can serve as stimuli for Pavlovian processes, and, in compound with other cues, produce apparent function-transformation effects. |
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Keywords: | function transformation Pavlovian conditioning stimulus relation stimulus compound keyboard typing humans |
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