Discriminating the stimulus elements during human odor-taste learning: a successful analytic stance does not eliminate learning |
| |
Authors: | Stevenson Richard J Mahmut Mehmet K |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia. dick.stevenson@mq.edu.au |
| |
Abstract: | Odor "sweetness" may arise from experiencing odors and tastes together, resulting in a flavor memory that is later reaccessed by the odor. Forming a flavor memory may be impaired if the taste and odor elements are apparent during exposure, suggesting that configural processing may underpin learning. Using a new procedure, participants made actual flavor discriminations for one odor-taste pair (e.g., Taste A vs. Odor X-Taste A) and mock discriminations for another (e.g., Odor Y-Taste B vs. Odor Y-Taste B). Participants, who were successful at detecting the actual flavor discriminations, demonstrated equal amounts of learning for both odor-taste pairings. These results suggest that although a capacity to discriminate flavor into its elements may be necessary to support learning, whether participants experience a configural or elemental flavor representation may not. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|