In the phenomenon of transfer along a continuum (TAC), initial training on easy items facilitates later learning of a harder discrimination. TAC is a widely replicated cross-species phenomenon that is well predicted by certain kinds of associative theory. A recent report of an approximately opposite phenomenon (i.e., facilitation by initial training on hard items) poses a puzzle for such theories, but is predicted by a dual-system model (COVIS). However, across four experiments, we present substantial evidence that this counterintuitive finding was in error. Rather, the result appears to be a false positive and, as such, should not form part of the evidence base for COVIS nor be considered as a counter-example to the pervasive TAC phenomeno...
Dual-process accounts posit that human learning can occur as a consequence of both associative and p...
Researchers debate whether higher-order learning can be reduced to an associative process. To shed l...
In the first stage of Experiments 1-3, subjects learned to associate different geometrical figures w...
In the phenomenon of transfer along a continuum (TAC), initial training on easy items facilitates la...
The Reverse TAC effect occurs when learning of a hard discrimination is facilitated by pre-training ...
The study of learning transfer yields conflicting patterns of results. While some research shows str...
Some researchers have argued that the category learning literature is conclusive: people learn to g...
While learning is often highly specific to the exact stimuli and tasks used during training, there a...
The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that positive transfer is a function of the de...
The associative sequence learning model proposes that the development of the mirror system depends o...
This experiment was designed to study the learning to learn effect specific to a matching task. The ...
The associative sequence learning model proposes that the development of the mirror system depends o...
In category learning, transfer emerges when individuals apply the knowledge or strategy learned with...
Over the past decades, experimental research with animals has demonstrated that the generalisation b...
This paper examines the ability of a dual-system, formal model of categorization COVIS (Ashby, Paul...
Dual-process accounts posit that human learning can occur as a consequence of both associative and p...
Researchers debate whether higher-order learning can be reduced to an associative process. To shed l...
In the first stage of Experiments 1-3, subjects learned to associate different geometrical figures w...
In the phenomenon of transfer along a continuum (TAC), initial training on easy items facilitates la...
The Reverse TAC effect occurs when learning of a hard discrimination is facilitated by pre-training ...
The study of learning transfer yields conflicting patterns of results. While some research shows str...
Some researchers have argued that the category learning literature is conclusive: people learn to g...
While learning is often highly specific to the exact stimuli and tasks used during training, there a...
The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that positive transfer is a function of the de...
The associative sequence learning model proposes that the development of the mirror system depends o...
This experiment was designed to study the learning to learn effect specific to a matching task. The ...
The associative sequence learning model proposes that the development of the mirror system depends o...
In category learning, transfer emerges when individuals apply the knowledge or strategy learned with...
Over the past decades, experimental research with animals has demonstrated that the generalisation b...
This paper examines the ability of a dual-system, formal model of categorization COVIS (Ashby, Paul...
Dual-process accounts posit that human learning can occur as a consequence of both associative and p...
Researchers debate whether higher-order learning can be reduced to an associative process. To shed l...
In the first stage of Experiments 1-3, subjects learned to associate different geometrical figures w...