Biased feedback in spatial recall yields a violation of delta rule learning

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Abstract

This study investigates whether inductive processes influencing spatial memory performance generalize to supervised learning scenarios with differential feedback. After providing a location memory response in a spatial recall task, participants received visual feedback showing the target location. In critical blocks, feedback was systematically biased either 4o toward the vertical axis (toward condition) or 4o farther away from the vertical axis (away condition). Results showed that the weaker teaching signal (i.e., a smaller difference between the remembered location and the feedback location) produced a stronger experience-dependent change over blocks in the away condition than in the toward condition. This violates delta rule learning. Subsequent simulations of the dynamic field theory of spatial cognition provide a theoretically unified account of these results. © 2010 The Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Lipinski, J., Spencer, J. P., & Samuelson, L. K. (2010). Biased feedback in spatial recall yields a violation of delta rule learning. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 17(4), 581–588. https://doi.org/10.3758/PBR.17.4.581

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