Learning permits even relatively uninteresting stimuli to capture attention if they are established as predictors of important outcomes. Associative theories explain this “learned predictiveness” effect by positing that attention is a function of the relative strength of the association between stimuli and outcomes. In three experiments we show that this explanation is incomplete: learned overt visual-attention is not a function of the relative strength of the association between stimuli and an outcome. In three experiments, human participants were exposed to triplets of stimuli that comprised (i) a target (which defined correct responding), (ii) a stimulus which was perfectly correlated with the presentation of the target and (iii) a stimu...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Three localized, visual pattern stimuli were trained as predictive signals of auditory outcomes. One...
Prior research has suggested that attention is determined by exploiting what is known about the most...
Learning permits even relatively uninteresting stimuli to capture attention if they are established ...
Prediction error (‘‘surprise’’) affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for w...
Over the last forty years, experimental support for different models of associative learning has com...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
Prediction error ("surprise") affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for whi...
It is well established that associative learning, such as learning new cue-outcome pairings, produce...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
Within the domain of associative learning, there is substantial evidence that people (and other anim...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
Abstract Certain studies of associative learning show that attention is more substantial to cues tha...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
Several attention-based models of associative learning are built upon the learned predictiveness pri...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Three localized, visual pattern stimuli were trained as predictive signals of auditory outcomes. One...
Prior research has suggested that attention is determined by exploiting what is known about the most...
Learning permits even relatively uninteresting stimuli to capture attention if they are established ...
Prediction error (‘‘surprise’’) affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for w...
Over the last forty years, experimental support for different models of associative learning has com...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
Prediction error ("surprise") affects the rate of learning: We learn more rapidly about cues for whi...
It is well established that associative learning, such as learning new cue-outcome pairings, produce...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
Within the domain of associative learning, there is substantial evidence that people (and other anim...
This article presents a comprehensive survey of research concerning interactions between associative...
Abstract Certain studies of associative learning show that attention is more substantial to cues tha...
Two experiments used eye-tracking procedures to investigate the relationship between attention and a...
Several attention-based models of associative learning are built upon the learned predictiveness pri...
A common distinction made by theorists examining the mental processes contributing to human learning...
Three localized, visual pattern stimuli were trained as predictive signals of auditory outcomes. One...
Prior research has suggested that attention is determined by exploiting what is known about the most...