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The acquisition of conditioned responding.
Author(s) -
Justin A. Harris
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of experimental psychology animal behavior processes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1939-2184
pISSN - 0097-7403
DOI - 10.1037/a0021883
Subject(s) - weibull distribution , psychology , associative learning , stimulus (psychology) , classical conditioning , associative property , conditioning , exponential function , cognitive psychology , statistics , mathematics , mathematical analysis , pure mathematics
This report analyzes the acquisition of conditioned responses in rats trained in a magazine approach paradigm. Following the suggestion by Gallistel, Fairhurst, and Balsam (2004), Weibull functions were fitted to the trial-by-trial response rates of individual rats. These showed that the emergence of responding was often delayed, after which the response rate would increase relatively gradually across trials. The fit of the Weibull function to the behavioral data of each rat was equaled by that of a cumulative exponential function incorporating a response threshold. Thus, the growth in conditioning strength on each trial can be modeled by the derivative of the exponential--a difference term of the form used in many models of associative learning (e.g., Rescorla & Wagner, 1972). Further analyses, comparing the acquisition of responding with a continuously reinforced stimulus (CRf) and a partially reinforced stimulus (PRf), provided further evidence in support of the difference term. In conclusion, the results are consistent with conventional models that describe learning as the growth of associative strength, incremented on each trial by an error-correction process.

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