Latent Inhibition & Perceptual Learning Flashcards
REPRESENTATION DEVELOPMENT
- ^ complex exposure learning; result in change in the way organism represents world
- both latent inhibition/perceptual learning have important influence on how/what animals/us learn
LATENT INHIBITION
LUBOW & MOORE (1959)
- above discovered it
- misnomer; nothing to do w/inhibition
- simple exposure to stimulus makes animal slower to learn about it later
KANIEL & LUBOW (1986)
- showed latent inhibition as function of age
LATENT INHIBITION: CONTEXT SPECIFICITY
MCLAREN, BENNETT, PLAISTED, AITKEN & MACKINTOSH (1994)
- rats = pre-exposed to CS in 1 context; appetitively trained/conditioned w/CS in same/dif context
- CS/pre-CS scores gather for magazine entry
- highly STATSIG context-specificity effect (ie. ^ latent inhibition/poor learning in same group > dif
LOVIBOND, PRESTON & MACKINTOSH (19984)
- effect does NOT occur w/simple conditioning (ie. if experiment repeated but CS/US paired before switching contexts/testing w/o pre-exposure = no context switch effect
PERCEPTUAL LEARNING
- when simple exposure to stimulus results in faster learning; typically via ^ rapid acquisition of discrimination between S+/S-
- can be explained by appealing to latent inhibition
PL: GIBSON & WALK (1958)
- post pre-exposure to shapes in home cage, rats were better able to discriminate between them when trained in jumping stand compared to non-pre-exposed controls
PL: MCLAREN, KAYE & MACKINTOSH (1989)
- theory that postulates associative basis for representation development
- associations between elements -> salience reduction (latent inhibition)
- SO less learning to those elements
DIF LI OF COMMON ELEMENTS AS PL MECHANISM
- if shaded area for stimuli set possessing similarity structure = < less salient -> stimuli enhanced discriminability from one another follows
- at least 2 ways of bringing it about:
1. stimulus set exposure differentially reduces salience of shaded area as features are encountered ^ oft so reliably predict each other
2. prototypical stimulus corresponding to shaded area can be pre-exposed
LI & PL: MCLAREN & MCKINTOSH (2000)
- conditioning measure = consumption of 1 of 2 novel vinegars (ie. red wine) post conditioning to other (ie. balsamic) following indicated pre-exposure
- low scores = high aversion = strong generalisation from condition of other vinegar
- less generalisation indicates perceptual learning
PI: FACE INVERSION EFFECT
CIVILE ET AL. (2014)
- 2 images can be mistaken to be 2 dif photos of same person as inverted stimuli = harder to tell apart so upright recognition is superior
- BUT once orientated upright it’s clear they’re 2 dif people
LI: FACIAL RECOGNITION
- application of common element research aka. same as vinegars example
- animal cognition + human psych
- average/prototypical facial features -> less salient; distinctive/unique features departing norm -> relatively more salient
- helps upright facial recognition BUT not upside down as we’re not used to them; representatives involved are orientation specific
- PI can be “turned off” for upright faces to reduce inversion effect via neurostimulation
DIAMOND & CAREY (1986)
- inversion effect in old/new recognition experiment can be obtained w/other categories other than faces as well as pps = very familiar w/subjects (ie. experts w/gundogs)