1981
DOI: 10.3758/bf03326958
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Effects of mixed training and overtraining on recoveries from amnesias in rats with visual cortical ablations

Abstract: This investigation was concerned with the question of whether amnesias for simple visual tasks which result from injuries to the visual cortex can be corrected via training on other visual tasks. Such effects were noted, but only when the problems shared a common mode of solution.It was also observed, in contradiction to a classical conclusion of Lashley, that extensive preoperative overtraining conveys some protection of postoperative performance of the blackwhite discrimination problem.Many years ago, Chow (… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Several have confirmed his observation that ablations of the posterior neocortex will completely suppress postoperative performance on the black-white problem (e.g., Glendenning, 1972; Gray & Meyer, 1981;Horel, Bettinger, Royce, & Meyer, 1966;LeVere & Morlock, 1973;Meyer, Yutzey, Dalby, & Meyer, 1968;Petrinovich & Carew, 1969;Thompson, 1960), but that such injuries have a very small effect upon the rate at which the problem is learned by preoperatively naive subjects (Bodart, Hata, Meyer, & Meyer, 1980;Horel et aI., 1966;Jonason, Lauber, Robbins, Meyer, & Meyer, 1970;see Gray & Meyer, 1981, for review). Indeed, the sole discrepancy between his obThis research was supported by a grant in aid from the Donald Jansen Fund of Ohio State University.…”
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confidence: 72%
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“…Several have confirmed his observation that ablations of the posterior neocortex will completely suppress postoperative performance on the black-white problem (e.g., Glendenning, 1972; Gray & Meyer, 1981;Horel, Bettinger, Royce, & Meyer, 1966;LeVere & Morlock, 1973;Meyer, Yutzey, Dalby, & Meyer, 1968;Petrinovich & Carew, 1969;Thompson, 1960), but that such injuries have a very small effect upon the rate at which the problem is learned by preoperatively naive subjects (Bodart, Hata, Meyer, & Meyer, 1980;Horel et aI., 1966;Jonason, Lauber, Robbins, Meyer, & Meyer, 1970;see Gray & Meyer, 1981, for review). Indeed, the sole discrepancy between his obThis research was supported by a grant in aid from the Donald Jansen Fund of Ohio State University.…”
mentioning
confidence: 72%
“…Hence, unless other treatments are employed, there is no "serial lesion effect" (Finger, 1978;Finger, Walbran, & Stein, 1973). However, if two-stage posterior preparations are given inter operative retraining, they then exhibit sparing of ultimate performance on the black-white problem (Glendenning, 1972;Gray & Meyer, 1981;Thompson, 1960). That effect is not due simply to extra training, since equivalent amounts of overtraining prior to surgery fail to yield it (Glendenning, 1972;.…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…As we first showed many years ago, a normal rat that is trained on a problem and then prepared with an injury to the posterior half of its cortex will forget the problem, but will then relearn it in about as many trials as it takes for a naive posterior subject to learn the problem after surgery. The number of trials required in either instance will vary with the training conditions, but the near-equivalence of learning and relearning rates has been observed in many different contexts (Glendenning, 1972;Gray & D. R. Meyer, 1981;Horel, Bettinger, Royce, & D. R. Meyer, 1966;Lashley, 1935).…”
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confidence: 99%