In his 1948 address to the Division of Theoretical-Experimental Psychology of the American Psychological Association, Kenneth W. Spence discussed six distinctions between cognitive and stimulus-response (S-R) theories of learning. In this article, I first review these six distinctions and then focus on two of them in the context of my own research. This research concerns the specification of stimulus-stimulus associations in associative learning and the characterization of the neural systems underlying those associations. In the course of describing Spence's views and my research, I hope to communicate some of the richness of Spence's S-R psychology and its currency within modern scientific analyses of behavior. Copyright 2008 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Holland, P. C. (2008). Cognitive versus stimulus-response theories of learning. Learning and Behavior, 36(3), 227–241. https://doi.org/10.3758/LB.36.3.227
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