Several contemporary models of associative learning anticipate that the higher responding to a compound of two cues separately trained with a common outcome than to each of the cues alone -a summation effect- is modulated by the similarity between the cues forming the compound. Here, we explored this hypothesis in a series of causal learning experiments with humans. Participants were presented with two visual cues that separately predicted a common outcome and later asked for the outcome predicted by the compound of the two cues. Importantly, cue similarity was varied between groups through changes in shape, spatial position, color, configuration and rotation. In variance with the predictions of these models, we observed similar and strong ...
Additivity-related assumptions have been proven to modulate blocking in human causal learning. Typic...
Theories of causal cognition describe how animals code cognitive primitives such as causal strength,...
Learning to categorize perceptually similar stimuli can result in people becoming more sensitive to ...
Several contemporary models of associative learning anticipate that the higher responding to a compo...
Several contemporary models anticipate that the summation effect is modulated by the similarity betw...
Theories of generalization distinguish between elemental and configural stimulus processing, dependi...
In three experiments human participants received training in a causal judgement task. After learning...
How do we apply learning from one situation to a similar, but not identical, situation? The principl...
© 2018 American Psychological Association. In four experiments, participants' performance on a varie...
The ability to learn associations between events is of crucial importance for human and non-human an...
A hallmark feature of elemental associative learning theories is that multiple cues compete for asso...
The experiments reported here investigated the cognitive processes involved in causal reasoning. Par...
Abstract-Given the task of diagnosing the source of a patient's allergic reac-tion, college stu...
In nature, sensory stimuli are organized in heterogeneous combinations. Salient items from these com...
Researchers debate whether higher-order learning can be reduced to an associative process. To shed l...
Additivity-related assumptions have been proven to modulate blocking in human causal learning. Typic...
Theories of causal cognition describe how animals code cognitive primitives such as causal strength,...
Learning to categorize perceptually similar stimuli can result in people becoming more sensitive to ...
Several contemporary models of associative learning anticipate that the higher responding to a compo...
Several contemporary models anticipate that the summation effect is modulated by the similarity betw...
Theories of generalization distinguish between elemental and configural stimulus processing, dependi...
In three experiments human participants received training in a causal judgement task. After learning...
How do we apply learning from one situation to a similar, but not identical, situation? The principl...
© 2018 American Psychological Association. In four experiments, participants' performance on a varie...
The ability to learn associations between events is of crucial importance for human and non-human an...
A hallmark feature of elemental associative learning theories is that multiple cues compete for asso...
The experiments reported here investigated the cognitive processes involved in causal reasoning. Par...
Abstract-Given the task of diagnosing the source of a patient's allergic reac-tion, college stu...
In nature, sensory stimuli are organized in heterogeneous combinations. Salient items from these com...
Researchers debate whether higher-order learning can be reduced to an associative process. To shed l...
Additivity-related assumptions have been proven to modulate blocking in human causal learning. Typic...
Theories of causal cognition describe how animals code cognitive primitives such as causal strength,...
Learning to categorize perceptually similar stimuli can result in people becoming more sensitive to ...