The effects of preexposure-test and conditioning-test intervals on the magnitude of latent inhibition

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Abstract

Using the conditioned taste aversion paradigm, two experiments were conducted to examine the effects of the interval between preexposure and test and that between conditioning and test on the magnitude of latent inhibition. Experiment 1 revealed that the degree of latent inhibition was attenuated when rats were given a 21-day interval between preexposure and test. It was also found that this attenuation was more marked in subjects which were given conditioning immediately after preexposure than those which were conditioned shortly before the test. Retention interval between preexposure and test was reduced to 12 days in Experiment 2, and exactly the same pattern of results as those found in Experiment 1 was obtained. These findings suggest that the memory of conditioning as well as that of preexposure decreases its retrievability after a long retention interval, although the former is more retainable than the latter.

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Ishii, K., Yamada, Y., Hishimura, Y., & Haga, Y. (2002). The effects of preexposure-test and conditioning-test intervals on the magnitude of latent inhibition. Japanese Psychological Research, 44(1), 51–56. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-5884.00004

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