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Dissertation
Human feature-positive discrimination learning : (not) the conditions for conditioning conditionals.
Authors: --- --- --- ---
Year: 2011 Publisher: Leuven K.U.Leuven. Faculteit Psychologie en pedagogische wetenschappen. Departement Psychologie

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Abstract

The main goal of this doctoral project is to explore the effect of a variety of factors on human feature-positive discrimination learning and to verify the generality of principles that describe the emergence of Pavlovian modulation. The term feature-positive discrimination refers to a procedure or learning task during which a participant, human or non-human animal, has to learn to respond to a so-called target stimulus in the presence of a feature (FT+), but not in the absence of this feature (T-; e.g., Sainsbury, 1971). Formally, this is described as FT+|T-. In the conditioning literature, it is strongly associated with the phenomenon of occasion setting or Pavlovian modulation (for reviews, see Holland, 1992; Swartzentruber, 1995).Pavlovian modulation refers to a hierarchical knowledge representation which may emerge during feature-positive discrimination learning. In contrast to standard elemental learning theories (e.g., Rescorla & Wagner, 1972), which assume that such discrimination learning results in the formation of a direct feature-reinforcer association, a modulatory perspective proposes that the feature may acquire an indirect association with the reinforcer. Stated differently, that the feature stimulus comes to modulate responding to the target stimulus (e.g., Moore, Newman and Glasgow, 1969).The different accounts on the emergence of modulation during feature-positive discrimination learning, proposed in the animal literature, may either focus on properties of the target stimulus (e.g., Rescorla, 1988) or the feature stimulus (e.g., Holland, 1983; Schmajuk, Lamoureux, & Holland, 1998). However, they converge on a procedural level in the notion that “modulation emerges if the feature is, a priori to learning the discrimination, a less likely predictor than is the target stimulus”.In three research lines, we investigated whether such a procedural account may hold during human feature-positive discrimination learning. In a first series of experiments, the relative salience levels of the feature and target stimuli were manipulated. During the second series, participants received different types of pre-training. This pre-training was instantiated in terms of differences in feature and target contingency or temporal contiguity information before discrimination learning. In the third line of research, prior differences in common ‘real-world’ knowledge on the causal likeliness of the feature and target, given certain reinforcers, were used.Results indicated that conditions which were hypothesized to evoke modulation, e.g., feature-positive discriminations with low-salience features, displayed, although not always convincingly, results in accordance with the properties of Pavlovian modulation (Holland, 1992). However, the conditions which were expected to be solved by means of simple excitation of the feature, as predicted by elemental learning models, also displayed one of these properties (for a similar discussion, see Dibbets, Maes, & Vossen, 2002), thus blurring a strict distinction between modulation and elemental learning or simple excitation.We conclude that a strict modulation versus simple excitation perspective does not hold, and that both within-trial emergent properties, which prominent configural models propose (e.g., Pearce, 1987, 1994, 2002), as well as between-trial emergent properties, such as abstract rules (e.g., Shanks & Darby, 1998) or a hierarchical stimulus structure (e.g., Bonardi & Jennings, 2009), are necessary to describe the observed pattern of resu

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Dissertation
Stimulus competition in associative learning: Basic processes and a model for fear generalization.
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2011 Publisher: Leuven K.U.Leuven. Faculteit Psychologie en pedagogische wetenschappen. Departement Psychologie

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Learning about the onset of important events in the environment serves an organism well, as itallows the organism to effectively and efficiently meet its needs, such as avoiding danger anddetecting sources of food, mates and shelter. Needless to say, directing anticipatory respondingselectively to the most likely candidate causes or predictors of important events is highlyadvantageous, as unwarranted anticipatory responding can come with significant costs and use ofenergy resources. As such, regulating and fine-tuning associative learning is critical in shapingadaptive behavior.This leads to the important question of how an organism comes to respond selectively to itsenvironment. The present dissertation fits in with this need to inquire into the basic psychologicalprocesses responsible for selectivity. In the first part of this dissertation, we present data that goagainst the explanation of selectivity put forward by traditional associative learning theories. Partially inspired by these data, we subsequently make a case for an alternative framework founded in mainstream cognitive psychology when analysing instances of selectivity in associative learning.The second and the third part of this dissertation zoom in on selectivity in a special case ofassociative learning, namely associative fear learning. Lack of selectivity in fear responding ispresumably a core aspect of what makes pathological fear so impairing: Fear responses do not remain specific to a single stimulus paired with actual danger but are elicited by a broad set of stimuli, resulting in an unwanted snowballing of fear responding and/or avoidance behavior. We present a set of preclinical fear conditioning studies in human and non-human animals that aim to provide insight in the pathogenesis and treatment of such unwarranted defensive behavior. Overall, the results of the studies suggest that disruption of selective learning may in part account for the development of non-specific fear responding. On a more positive note, results also indicate that retrospectively installing selectivity may be a promising route to remediate such non-specific fear responding. Because the primary dependent measure in our human fear conditioning studies is US-expectancy, we additionally present an evaluation of this measurement method. Following this evaluation, we conclude that human fear conditioning that relies on the US-expectancy measure stands the litmus test of external validity with respect to fear and anxiety.In summary, we hope to contribute to a fuller understanding of selectivity in associative (fear)learning and pathological fear with the current dissertation.

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Dissertation
Geheugenfalen bij anterograde amnesie: configureel deficit of inihibitiedeficit? : Een exploratieve studie met menselijke deelnemers.
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2011 Publisher: Leuven K.U.Leuven. Faculteit Psychologie en Pedagogische Wetenschappen

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