Proactive interference by cues presented without outcomes: Differences in context specificity of latent inhibition and conditioned inhibition
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2018Metadata
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Míguez Cavieres, Gonzalo
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Proactive interference by cues presented without outcomes: Differences in context specificity of latent inhibition and conditioned inhibition
Abstract
This report is part of a larger project examining associative interference as a function of the nature of the interfering and target
associations. Lick suppression experiments with rats assessed the effects of context shifts on proactive outcome interference by
latent inhibition (LI) and Pavlovian conditioned inhibition (CI) treatments on subsequently trained Pavlovian conditioned
excitation treatment. LI and CI were trained in Context A during Phase 1, and then excitation treatment was administered in
Context B during Phase 2, followed by tests for conditioned excitation in Contexts A, B, or C. Experiment 1 preliminarily
established our LI and CI treatments and resulted in equally retarded acquisition of behavioral control when the target cue was
subsequently trained as a conditioned excitor and tested in Context A. However, only CI treatment caused the target to pass a
summation test for inhibition. Centrally, Experiment 2 consisted of LI and CI treatments in Context A followed by excitatory
training in Context B. Testing found low excitatory control by both LI and CI cues in Context A relative to strong excitatory
control in Context B, but CI treatment transferred to Context C more strongly than LI treatment. Experiment 3 determined that LI
treatment failed to transfer to Context C even when the number of LI trials was greatly increased. Thus, first-learned LI appears to
be relatively context specific, whereas first-learned CI generalizes to a neutral context. These observations add to existing
evidence that LI and CI treatments result in different types of learning that diverge sharply in transfer to a novel test context.
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/169578
DOI: 10.3758/s13420-017-0306-x
ISSN: 15434508
15434494
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Learning and Behavior, Volumen 46, Issue 3, 2018, Pages 265-280
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