Reduced Summation with Common Features in Causal Judgments
In three experiments human participants received training in a causal judgment task. After learning which patterns were associated with an outcome, participants rated the likelihood of the outcome in the presence of a novel combination of the patterns. The first two experiments used two conditions i...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Experimental psychology 2010-01, Vol.57 (4), p.252-259 |
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Zusammenfassung: | In three experiments human participants received training in a causal judgment
task. After learning which patterns were associated with an outcome,
participants rated the likelihood of the outcome in the presence of a novel
combination of the patterns. The first two experiments used two conditions in
which two visual patterns were associated with the outcome. In one condition
these patterns shared a common feature. The third experiment only used the
common feature condition. According to an elemental theory (
Rescorla & Wagner, 1972
)
the response to the novel test pattern should have exceeded that made to the
individual training patterns, a summation effect, and this effect should have
been reduced by the addition of a common feature. Summation was observed but
since the common feature condition abolished, rather than merely reduced,
summation the results were not consistent with the Rescorla-Wagner Model (RWM)
nor with a configural alternative (
Pearce, 1994
). Instead, it is necessary to consider
models which allow the possibility of both elemental and configural strategies
in causal learning. The Replaced Elements Model (
Wagner, 2003
) is a development of the RWM
which can best predict the patterns of summation and summation failure in these
experiments. |
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ISSN: | 1618-3169 2190-5142 |
DOI: | 10.1027/1618-3169/a000030 |