Reversal from blocking in humans as a result of posttraining extinction of the blocking stimulus |
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Authors: | Francisco Arcediano Martha Escobar Helena Matute |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Psychology, SUNY–Binghamton, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, USA;(2) Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile;(3) SUNY–Brockport, Brockport, NY, USA; |
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Abstract: | In a blocking procedure, conditioned stimulus (CS) A is paired with the unconditioned stimulus (US) in Phase 1, and a compound of CSs A and X is then paired with the US in Phase 2. The usual result of such a treatment is that X elicits less conditioned responding than if the A-US pairings of Phase 1 had not occurred. Obtaining blocking with human participants has proven difficult, especially if a behavioral task is used or if the control group experiences reinforcement of a CS different from the blocking CS in Phase 1. In the present series, in which human participants and a behavioral measure of learning were used, we provide evidence of blocking, using the above described control condition. Most important, we demonstrate that extinction of the blocking CS (A) following blocking treatment reverses the blocking deficit (i.e., increases responding to X). These results are at odds with traditional associative theories of learning, but they support current associative theories that predict that posttraining manipulations of the competing stimulus can result in a reversal of stimulus competition phenomena. |
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