Emergent, untrained stimulus relations in many-to-one matching-to-sample discriminations in rats.

Esho Nakagawa
Author Information
  1. Esho Nakagawa: Department of Psychology, Kagawa University, 1-1 Saiwai-Cho, Takamatsu, Kagawa, 760-8522, Japan. esho@ed.kagawa-u.ac.jp

Abstract

The present experiment investigated whether rats formed emergent, untrained stimulus relations in many-to-one matching-to-sample discriminations. In Phase 1, rats were trained to match two samples (triangle and horizontal stripes) to a common comparison (horizontal stripes) and two additional samples (circle or vertical stripes) to another comparison (vertical stripes). Then, in Phase 2, the rats were trained to match the one sample (triangle) to a new comparison (black) and the other sample (circle) to another comparison (white). In the Phase 3 test, half the rats (consistent group) were given two new tasks in which the sample-correct comparison relation was consistent with any emergent stimulus relations that previously may have been learned. The remaining 6 rats (inconsistent group) were given two new tasks in which the sample-correct comparison relation was not consistent with any previously learned emergent stimulus relations. Rats in the consistent group showed more accurate performance at the start of Phase 3, and faster learning to criterion in this phase, as compared with rats in the inconsistent group. This finding suggests that rats may form emergent, untrained stimulus relations between the discriminative stimuli in many-to-one matching-to-sample discriminations.

References

  1. Biometrika. 1947;34(1-2):28-35 [PMID: 20287819]

MeSH Term

Animals
Behavior, Animal
Conditioning, Psychological
Discrimination Learning
Male
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Teaching
Transfer, Psychology

Word Cloud

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