Effects of conditioning history on selective stimulus control by elements of compound discriminative stimuli |
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Authors: | Ryan Carolyn S Hemmes Nancy S Brown Bruce L |
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Affiliation: | a Institute for Children with Autism and Related Disorders and Queens College of the City University of New York, CUNY, 65-30 Kissena Blvd., Psychology Department, NSB E-318, Flushing, NY 11367, USA b Queens College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, CUNY, 65-30 Kissena Blvd., Psychology Department, NSB E-318, Flushing, NY 11367, USA |
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Abstract: | Effects of prior discrimination training on stimulus control by color and shape dimensions of compound stimuli were studied with college students. In Phase 1, single-stimulus discrimination training was conducted for two values of color and shape. Phase 2 discrimination training employed two 2-dimensional compound stimuli composed of the color and shape stimuli trained in Phase 1. For conflict-compound stimuli, the stimulus-response-consequence contingency was altered between phases for one stimulus dimension (target dimension), but not for the other, non-target, dimension. Level of congruence (100%, 25%, and 0%) of the contingency for the target dimension between phases was manipulated across groups. When each stimulus value was tested in Phase 3, level of Phase-2-consistent responding to the target dimension varied with level of Phase-1-to-Phase-2 congruence. In Experiment 2, training history for the non-target dimension was altered across three conditions: (a) Correlated with reinforcement, as in Experiment 1, (b) No-Training, or (c) Not-Correlated. Phase-2-consistent responding to the target cue in Phase 3 was lower under the latter conditions than under the Correlated condition, indicating that the non-target dimension modulated control by the target dimension, consistent with stimulus competition. The data suggest elemental, rather than configural processing of the compound stimuli during Phase 2. |
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Keywords: | Conflict-compound training Human Selective attention Selective stimulus control Stimulus competition Stimulus discrimination |
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