McLaren, I. P., Jones, F. W., McLaren, R. and Yeates, F. (2013) Cue competition in human incidental learning. In: Reinforcement Learning and Decision Making Meeting 2013, 25th-27th October, Princeton, New Jersey, USA .There is a question as to whether cue competition effects can be observed in incidental learning paradigms in humans. Some authors have reported that cue competition is not observed, and that previous demonstrations of cue competition have relied on explicit awareness of the task in hand. This would imply that these effects are more likely to be the product of cognitive inference than associative learning. We addressed this question by using two paradigms previously shown to produce associative learning under incidental c...
It is well established that associative learning, such as learning new cue-outcome pairings, produce...
Within the domain of associative learning, there is substantial evidence that people (and other anim...
When multiple cues are associated with the same outcome, organisms tend to select between the cues, ...
CogSci 2013 - 35th annual meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, Berlin, Germany, 31 July - 3 Aug...
Overshadowing and blocking are two important findings that are frequently used to constrain models o...
Overshadowing and blocking are two important findings that are frequently used to constrain models o...
In both Pavlovian conditioning and human causal judg-ment, competition between cues is well known to...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Human behavioural data from computerised 2-choice simple reaction time psychology experiment.This da...
In situations in which multiple predictors anticipate the presence or absence of an outcome, cues co...
The ability to learn associations between events is of crucial importance for human and non-human an...
Datasets relating to this thesis can also be found in ORE: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/15714; http:/...
The mechanisms responsible for cue competition were investigated. In Chapter 1, an overview of the l...
Blocking is the most important phenomenon in the history of associative learning theory: for over 40...
Three experiments explored whether weakening temporal contiguity between auditory cues and an aversi...
It is well established that associative learning, such as learning new cue-outcome pairings, produce...
Within the domain of associative learning, there is substantial evidence that people (and other anim...
When multiple cues are associated with the same outcome, organisms tend to select between the cues, ...
CogSci 2013 - 35th annual meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, Berlin, Germany, 31 July - 3 Aug...
Overshadowing and blocking are two important findings that are frequently used to constrain models o...
Overshadowing and blocking are two important findings that are frequently used to constrain models o...
In both Pavlovian conditioning and human causal judg-ment, competition between cues is well known to...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Human behavioural data from computerised 2-choice simple reaction time psychology experiment.This da...
In situations in which multiple predictors anticipate the presence or absence of an outcome, cues co...
The ability to learn associations between events is of crucial importance for human and non-human an...
Datasets relating to this thesis can also be found in ORE: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/15714; http:/...
The mechanisms responsible for cue competition were investigated. In Chapter 1, an overview of the l...
Blocking is the most important phenomenon in the history of associative learning theory: for over 40...
Three experiments explored whether weakening temporal contiguity between auditory cues and an aversi...
It is well established that associative learning, such as learning new cue-outcome pairings, produce...
Within the domain of associative learning, there is substantial evidence that people (and other anim...
When multiple cues are associated with the same outcome, organisms tend to select between the cues, ...