Summation and configuration between and within sensory modalities in classical conditioning of the rabbit

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Abstract

Three experiments examined "atomistic" and "configurai" processes in stimulus compounding using the rabbit's conditioned nictitating membrane response. Two conditioned stimuli (CSs) were trained separately and then tested together in a compound. Animals trained with CSs from different modalities-namely, tone and light-showed summation in both acquisition and extinction. That is, the probability of a response to the compound could be predicted by the statistical sum of responding to the CSs. In contrast, animals trained with CSs from the auditory modality, tone and noise, showed a level of responding to the tone + noise compound that was the same as that of the CSs, well under the level predicted by the statistical sum of responding to the CSs. In conclusion, atomistic processes appear to predominate in cross-modal compounding. Configurai processes may occur during compounding within the auditory modality, but atomistic alternatives-namely, common elements and selective attention hypotheses-may be able to explain the results. © 1994 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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APA

Kehoe, E. J., Horne, A. J., Horne, P. S., & Macrae, M. (1994). Summation and configuration between and within sensory modalities in classical conditioning of the rabbit. Animal Learning & Behavior, 22(1), 19–26. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03199952

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