2008
DOI: 10.3758/lb.36.2.67
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Evaluating conditioning of related and unrelated stimuli using a compound test

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Nevertheless those earlier studies raise similar issues of measuring the success of conditioning for stimuli with potentially different starting points before conditioning. For this reason, Rescorla (2007) recently explored several of those situations using the present compound test procedure. He found evidence that the interactions conventionally observed for these earlier cases persisted even when assessed using that compound test.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless those earlier studies raise similar issues of measuring the success of conditioning for stimuli with potentially different starting points before conditioning. For this reason, Rescorla (2007) recently explored several of those situations using the present compound test procedure. He found evidence that the interactions conventionally observed for these earlier cases persisted even when assessed using that compound test.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the intradimensional dependencies related two vowels, whereas the interdimensional dependencies related a vowel and a consonant. Experiments with non-phonological stimuli, and even with non-human subjects, have repeatedly shown that perceptual similarity facilitates association between the elements of a compound stimulus (Köhler, 1941;Prentice and Asch, 1958;Arnold and Bower, 1972;Rescorla and Gillan, 1980;Rescorla, 1986;Creel et al, 2004;Rescorla, 2008). To test whether this effect is sufficient to explain the results of Experiments 1 and 3, Experiment 4 compared two interdimensional patterns, one relating vowels and the other relating a vowel and a consonant.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As with the other formal complexitybiases reviewed above, there are parallels in non‐linguistic learning: Two stimuli, or two elements of a compound stimulus, are more likely to cohere in perception and become associated in memory if they are contiguous in time or space, or are perceptually similar (Asch 1969; Arnold and Bower 1972; Creel et al. 2004; Köhler 1941; Prentice and Asch 1958; Rescorla 1980; Rescorla and Gillan 1980; Rescorla 2008; but see Pacton and Perruchet 2008). It would therefore be surprising if contiguity and similarity did not facilitate acquisition of within‐stimulus dependencies in the lab.…”
Section: Relations Between Featuresmentioning
confidence: 96%