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Aging and the Detection of Contingency in Causal Learning.
Authors:Mutter, Sharon A.   Williams, Thomas W.
Abstract:Young and older participants' ability to detect negative, random, and positive response-outcome contingencies was evaluated using both contingency estimation and response rate adaptation tasks. Age differences in contingency estimation were consistently greater for negative than positive contingencies, and these differences, though still present, were smaller when response rate adaptation was used as the measure of contingency learning. Detecting causal contingency apparently becomes more difficult with age, especially when an oven numerical estimate of contingency must be provided and when the relationship between a causal event and an outcome is negative. A model that incorporates features of both associative and rule-based approaches to contingency learning (e.g., P. C. Price & J. F. Yates, 1995; D. R. Shanks, 1995) provides the best explanation for this pattern of findings. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords:aging   causal contingency   contingency detection   causal learning   response outcome contigencies   age differences   response rate   response rate adaptation
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