Research on perceptual learning shows that the way stimuli are presented leads to different outcomes. The intermixed/blocked (I/B) effect is one of these outcomes, and different mechanisms have been proposed to explain it. In human research, it seems that comparison between stimuli is important, and the placement of a distractor between the pre-exposed stimuli interferes with the effect. Results from animal research are usually interpreted in different terms because the type of procedure normally used in animal perceptual learning does not favour comparison. In our experiments, we explore the possibility that a distractor placed between the to-be-discriminated stimuli may interfere with the perceptual learning process in rats. In Experiment 1, two flavoured solutions are presented in an I/B fashion, with a short time lapse between them to favour comparison, showing the typical I/B effect. In Experiment 2, we introduced a distractor in between the solutions, abolishing this effect. Experiment 3 further replicates this by comparing two intermixed groups with or without distractor. The results replicate the findings from human research, suggesting that comparison also plays an important role in animal perceptual learning.
Please cite this article as: Recio SA, Iliescu AF, de Brugada I, The amount of exposure determines generalization in animal perceptual learning using short inter-stimulus intervals, Behavioural Processes (2019),
Three experiments investigated mediated configural learning in male rats. In
Experiment 1, after exposure to audio-visual compounds AX and BY, rats received
trials where X was paired with shock, and Y was not. The idea that conditioning
with X enables the evoked configural representation of AX to be linked to shock
received support from the facts that while AX provoked more fear than BX, there
was no difference between BY and AY. Similarly, Experiment 2 showed that after
exposure to AX and BY, separate pairings of X and Y with shock resulted in more
fear to AX and BY than AY and BX. In Experiment 3, rats in group consistent
received separate exposures to A and X in Context C, and B and Y in D, while
those in group inconsistent received A and X (and B and Y) in both C and D.
After rats had received shocks in both C and D, rats in group consistent showed
more fear to AX and BY than to BX and AY, but this was not the case in group
inconsistent. These results indicate that configural representations, formed
either by presenting auditory and visual stimuli as parts of a compound or in a
shared context, are subject to a process of mediated learning.
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