Associative activation of stimulus representations restores lost salience: Implications for perceptual learning. |
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Authors: | Hall, Geoffrey Blair, C. A. J. Artigas, Antonio A. |
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Abstract: | In 3 experiments, rats received preexposure to presentations of a compound flavor BX. The effective salience of B was then tested by assessing its ability to interfere with the aversion controlled by another flavor or the tendency to drink a saline solution after the induction of a salt need. It was found that the effective salience of B was maintained when during preexposure, presentations of BX alternated with presentations of X alone. This was true both when BX was presented as a simultaneous compound (Experiment 1) and as a serial compound (X→B; Experiments 2 and 3); salience was not maintained when the serial compound took the form B→X (Experiments 2 and 3a). It was argued that the salience of B declines during preexposure but is restored when presentations of X are able to activate the representation of B by way of the associative X-B link. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | rat conditioning perceptual learning stimulus salience stimulus representations associative activation aversion |
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