“…Higher-order conditioning procedures have become a popular means of examining the neurobiology of learning and memory (for a review, see Gewirtz and Davis, 2000; see also, e.g., Lin and Honey, 2011;Gilboa et al, 2014;Holland, 2016;Lay et al, 2018;Maes et al, 2020;Mollick et al, 2020). This popularity reflects the relevance of higher-order conditioning to clinical domains (e.g., Davey and Arulampalan, 1982;Davey and McKenna, 1983;Wessa and Flor, 2007; see also , Field, 2006;Haselgrove and Hogarth, 2011), but also the practical advantages of the procedures, and the potential insights that their use enables: The procedures allow the complex Note: A and X are conditioned stimuli and the US denotes an unconditioned stimulus.…”