Sequential causal learning in humans and rats

Authors
Publication date 2008
Host editors
  • B.C. Love
  • K. McRae
  • V.M. Sloutsky
Book title Proceedings of the 30th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society
ISBN
  • 9780976831846
Event CogSci 2008
Pages (from-to) 185-190
Publisher Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Recent experiments (Beckers, De Houwer, PineƱo, & Miller, 2005;Beckers, Miller, De Houwer, & Urushihara, 2006) have shown that pretraining with unrelated cues can dramatically influence the performance of humans in a causal learning paradigm and rats in a standard Pavlovian conditioning paradigm. Such pretraining can make classic phenomena (e.g. forward and backward blocking) disappear entirely. We explain these phenomena by a new Bayesian theory of sequential causal learning. Our theory assumes that humans and rats have available two alternative generative models for causal learning
with continuous outcome variables. Using model-selection methods, the theory predicts how the form of the pretraining determines which model is selected. Detailed computer
simulations are in good agreement with experimental findings.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at http://www.cogsci.rpi.edu/CSJarchive/Proceedings/2008/pdfs/p185.pdf
Permalink to this page
Back