FACTORS IMPACTING EMERGENCE OF BEHAVIORAL CONTROL BY UNDERSELECTED STIMULI IN HUMANS AFTER REDUCTION OF CONTROL BY OVERSELECTED STIMULI

Stimulus overselectivity occurs when only one of potentially many aspects of the environment controls behavior. Adult participants were trained and tested on a trial‐and‐error discrimination learning task while engaging in a concurrent load task, and overselectivity emerged. When responding to the o...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of the experimental analysis of behavior Vol. 94; no. 2; pp. 125 - 133
Main Authors Broomfield, Laura, McHugh, Louise, Reed, Phil
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.09.2010
Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, Inc
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Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0022-5002
1938-3711
1938-3711
DOI10.1901/jeab.2010.94-125

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Summary:Stimulus overselectivity occurs when only one of potentially many aspects of the environment controls behavior. Adult participants were trained and tested on a trial‐and‐error discrimination learning task while engaging in a concurrent load task, and overselectivity emerged. When responding to the overselected stimulus was reduced by reinforcing a novel stimulus in the presence of the previously overselected stimulus in a second trial‐and‐error discrimination task, behavioral control by the underselected stimulus became stronger. However, this result was only found under certain circumstances: when there was substantial overselectivity in the first training phase; when control by the underselected stimulus in the first phase was particularly low; and when there was effective reduction in the behavioral control exerted by the previously overselected stimuli. The emergence of behavioral control by the underselected stimulus suggests that overselectivity is not simply due to an attention deficit, because for the emergence to occur, the stimuli must have been attended to and learned about in the training phase; but that a range of additional learning factors may play a role.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-KDJ03Z5G-9
istex:3E1F9AA8A6791E36A3F46B3D327160196996FEDD
ArticleID:JEAB4064
This research was supported by a grant from The Disabilities Trust. Some of these data were presented at the second European Association for Behaviour Analysis (EABA) Conference, Gdansk, Poland, 2005. Thanks are due to Lisa A. Osborne for her support.
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ISSN:0022-5002
1938-3711
1938-3711
DOI:10.1901/jeab.2010.94-125