Assessing the blocking of occasion setting
Author
Abstract
An occasion setter (OS) is a stimulus or context with the capacity to disambiguate an ambiguous conditioned
stimulus (CS). Previous research has shown that OSs share some features with regular Pavlovian CSs. Amongst
them, research has shown that OSs are subject to blocking; that is, a new OS exerts reduced behavioral control
after training in compound with a previously established OS. Of additional interest, in Pavlovian blocking, it has
been reported that a blocked CS comes to elicit conditioned responding after the extinction of the blocking CS.
This is an example of retrospective revaluation, a family of phenomena in which the response to a specific
stimulus is modified by training a related cue.
Here, three experiments sought to extend the analogies between OS and Pavlovian conditioning by examining
the blocking of OSs and its retrospective revaluation. In all experiments, an OS was established by pairing a CS
with food in the presence of the OS, but not in its absence (i.e., positive OS). Blocking was then trained by
presenting the OS in compound with a novel OS. Experiment 1 showed blocking of the second OS, but direct
exposure to the blocking OS did not enhance responding to the second OS. Experiment 2 replicated the blocking
effect but subsequent training of the blocking OS with a reversed contingency showed no retrospective revaluation. Experiment 3 examined whether blocking of the OS occurred with a novel CS during the compound
phase. In this experiment blocking was again observed, but only when subjects were tested with the original CS.
These results are discussed focusing on the underlying links at work in occasion setting.
Indexation
Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/169585
DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2018.02.008
ISSN: 18728308
03766357
Quote Item
Behavioural Processes 154 (2018) 52–59
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