Forward blocking in human learning sometimes reflects the failure to encode a cue-outcome relationship.

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY(2007)

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摘要
In two "allergist" causal judgement experiments, participants were trained with a blocking design (A = vertical bar AB +). The procedure allowed different food cues to be paired with different fictitious allergic reactions. On test, participants were asked to rate the causal efficacy of the target cues and to recall the particular allergic reaction (outcome) that had followed each cue during training. Forward blocking was observed on the causal judgement measure and on the outcome recall measure in both Experiment 1 and Experiment 2. A backward blocking contingency was also trained in Experiment 2 (AB + vertical bar A +). Backward blocking was not observed either on the causal judgement or on the outcome recall measure. The evidence from the recall measure suggests that forward blocking in this task results from a failure to encode the B-outcome relationship during training. Associative and nonassociative mechanisms of forward blocking are discussed.
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block design
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