Changes in the retrievability of associations to elements of the compound CS determine the expression of overshadowing
Autor: | James S. Miller, Joyce A Jagielo, Norman E. Spear |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 1990 |
Předmět: |
Taste
medicine.medical_specialty Memoria Classical conditioning Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Olfaction Stimulus (physiology) Audiology Developmental psychology Behavioral Neuroscience Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology Odor medicine Taste aversion Conditioning Animal Science and Zoology Psychology General Psychology |
Zdroj: | Animal Learning & Behavior. 18:157-161 |
ISSN: | 1532-5830 0090-4996 |
DOI: | 10.3758/bf03205253 |
Popis: | In two experiments, rats were presented with a taste conditioned stimulus (CS) alone, an odor CS alone, or an odor-taste compound followed by lithium chloride injection. When tested 1 day following conditioning, there was evidence that the odor cue overshadowed conditioning to the taste; however, there was no indication of overshadowing following a longer (2I-day) retention interval, despite undiminished strength of the aversion in animals conditioned with only the single element (taste). The overshadowing observed at the I-day retention interval was not reciprocal. Rats conditioned with the odor CS alone or with the compound CS expressed odor aversions of comparable strength-that is, no overshadowing. However, in contrast to the taste aversion, over shadowing of conditioning to the odor by taste was evident following a 2I-day retention interval. Rather than reflecting a failure of the overshadowed stimulus to acquire associative strength, these data suggest that overshadowing may be expressed, or not expressed, as a result of changes in the relative retrievability of learned associations over time. When a compound conditioned stimulus (CS) made up of two separable elements (AB) is paired with an uncon ditioned stimulus (US), the conditioned responding elicited by the less salient element (B) is weaker than if it alone had been paired with the US. This "overshadowing" of B by A has been interpreted by major theories of Pav lovian conditioning as a failure of the overshadowed ele ment to be associated with the US (Mackintosh, 1975, 1976; Rescorla & Wagner, 1972). Recent evidence indi cates, however, that the overshadowed stimulus may in fact become associated with the US during conditioning and that overshadowing represents a failure to express this learned association behaviorally. A variety of studies have reported that nonreinforced presentations of the overshadowing stimulus following conditioning with a compound CS result in an enhanced level of conditioned responding to the overshadowed stimulus that may be comparable to the level observed to the more salient stimulus. This "recovery" from over shadowing, via extinction of the overshadowing stimu lus, has been reported with either general activity (Kauf man & Bolles, 1981) or suppression of drinking (Matzel, Schachtman, & Miller, 1985; Matzel, Shuster, & Miller, 1987) as the index of conditioning. Recovery from overshadowing has also been reported as a function of an increase in the retention interval be |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |