Previous studies demonstrated that participants will retrospectively adjust their ratings about the relation between a target cue and an outcome on the basis of information about the causal status of a competing cue that was previously paired with the target cue. We demonstrate that such retrospective revaluation effects occur not only for target cues with which the competing cue was associated directly, but also for target cues that were associated indirectly with the competing cue. These second-order and third-order retrospective revaluation effects are compatible with certain implementations of the probabilistic contrast model and with a modified, extended comparator model, but cannot be explained on the basis of a revised Rescorla-Wagne...
Resurgence has been shown in human and nonhuman operant behavior, but not in derived rela-tional res...
Using a conditioned suppression task, two experiments examined retrospective revaluation effects aft...
Traditional associative models assume that associative weights are updated on a trial-by-trial basis...
Retrospective revaluation occurs when posttraining associative inflation or deflation of a cue resul...
none1noBackward blocking, unovershadowing, and backward conditioned inhibition are examples of retro...
We adapt an instance model of human memory, Minerva 2, to simulate retrospective revaluation. In the...
De Houwer and Beckers (in press, Experiment 1) recently demonstrated that ratings about the relation...
AbstractAssociative learning theory assumes that prediction error is a driving force in learning. A ...
Many theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly) that predicting wheth...
In judging the extent to which a cue causes an outcome, judgement can be affected by information abo...
It is becoming accepted that the associative strength of a cue can change in its absence. However, t...
In four experiments, the predictions made by causal model theory and the Rescorla-Wagner model were ...
In the blocking paradigm, subjects receive reinforced presentations of a compound, AX, after reinfor...
A hallmark feature of elemental associative learning theories is that multiple cues compete for asso...
Two experiments explored retroactive interference in human predictive learning. The name of a food w...
Resurgence has been shown in human and nonhuman operant behavior, but not in derived rela-tional res...
Using a conditioned suppression task, two experiments examined retrospective revaluation effects aft...
Traditional associative models assume that associative weights are updated on a trial-by-trial basis...
Retrospective revaluation occurs when posttraining associative inflation or deflation of a cue resul...
none1noBackward blocking, unovershadowing, and backward conditioned inhibition are examples of retro...
We adapt an instance model of human memory, Minerva 2, to simulate retrospective revaluation. In the...
De Houwer and Beckers (in press, Experiment 1) recently demonstrated that ratings about the relation...
AbstractAssociative learning theory assumes that prediction error is a driving force in learning. A ...
Many theories of contingency learning assume (either explicitly or implicitly) that predicting wheth...
In judging the extent to which a cue causes an outcome, judgement can be affected by information abo...
It is becoming accepted that the associative strength of a cue can change in its absence. However, t...
In four experiments, the predictions made by causal model theory and the Rescorla-Wagner model were ...
In the blocking paradigm, subjects receive reinforced presentations of a compound, AX, after reinfor...
A hallmark feature of elemental associative learning theories is that multiple cues compete for asso...
Two experiments explored retroactive interference in human predictive learning. The name of a food w...
Resurgence has been shown in human and nonhuman operant behavior, but not in derived rela-tional res...
Using a conditioned suppression task, two experiments examined retrospective revaluation effects aft...
Traditional associative models assume that associative weights are updated on a trial-by-trial basis...