Mahmoudi, Saba Peck, Sara Madden, Gregory J
Published in
Behavioural processes
Previous nonhuman studies have reported that sign-tracking to a conditioned stimulus (CS) is increased when the intertrial interval (ITI) duration is increased. Separate studies indicate that individual differences in sign-tracking (vs. goal-tracking) at a fixed ITI (and CS duration) is predictive of the conditioned reinforcer efficacy of the CS. T...
Ajuwon, Victor Ojeda, Andrés Murphy, Robin A Monteiro, Tiago Kacelnik, Alex
Published in
Animal cognition
Signals that reduce uncertainty can be valuable because well-informed decision-makers can better align their preferences to opportunities. However, some birds and mammals display an appetite for informative signals that cannot be used to increase returns. We explore the role that reward-predictive stimuli have in fostering such preferences, aiming ...
Servonnet, Alice Rompré, Pierre-Paul Samaha, Anne-Noël
Published in
Behavioural brain research
Reward-associated conditioned stimuli (CSs) can acquire predictive value, evoking conditioned approach behaviours that prepare animals to engage with forthcoming rewards. Such CSs can also acquire conditioned reinforcing value, becoming attractive and pursued. Through their conditioned effects, CSs can promote adaptive (e.g., locating food) but als...
Sears, Brittany Dunn, Roger M Pisklak, Jeffrey M Spetch, Marcia L McDevitt, Margaret A
Published in
Learning & behavior
Under certain conditions, pigeons will reliably prefer an alternative that leads to a lower probability of food over an alternative that leads to a higher probability of food (i.e., demonstrate suboptimal choice). A critical aspect of the typical procedure is that the alternative associated with less food provides differential stimuli that signal t...
McDevitt, Margaret A Pisklak, Jeffrey M Dunn, Roger M Spetch, Marcia L
Published in
Psychonomic bulletin & review
The influence of single option or forced-exposure (FE) trials was studied in the suboptimal choice task. Pigeons chose between an optimal alternative that led to food half of the time and a suboptimal alternative that led to food 20% of the time. Choice of the suboptimal alternative was compared across groups of subjects that received different num...
Galaj, Ewa Ranaldi, Robert
Published in
Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews
A major goal in psychology is to understand how environmental stimuli associated with primary rewards come to function as conditioned stimuli, acquiring the capacity to elicit similar responses to those elicited by primary rewards. Our neurobiological model is predicated on the Hebbian idea that concurrent synaptic activity on the primary reward ne...
Tabbara, Rayane I Rahbarnia, Arya Lê, Anh D Fletcher, Paul J
Published in
Psychopharmacology
Environmental stimuli paired with alcohol can function as conditioned reinforcers (CRfs) and trigger relapse to alcohol-seeking. In animal models, pharmacological stressors can enhance alcohol consumption and reinstate alcohol-seeking, but it is unknown whether stress can potentiate the conditioned reinforcing properties of alcohol-paired stimuli. ...
Puaud, Mickaël Higuera-Matas, Alejandro Brunault, Paul Everitt, Barry J Belin, David
BACKGROUND: Individuals addicted to cocaine spend much of their time foraging for the drug. Pavlovian drug-associated conditioned stimuli exert a major influence on the initiation and maintenance of drug seeking often long into abstinence, especially when presented response-contingently, acting as conditioned reinforcers that bridge delays to drug ...
Ghirlanda, Stefano Lind, Johan Enquist, Magnus
Published in
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
We present a new mathematical formulation of associative learning focused on non-human animals, which we call A-learning. Building on current animal learning theory and machine learning, A-learning is composed of two learning equations, one for stimulus-response values and one for stimulus values (conditioned reinforcement). A third equation implem...
Sosa, Rodrigo Dos Santos, Cristiano Valerio
Published in
Perspectives on behavior science
Impulsivity has traditionally been thought to involve various behavioral traits that can be measured using different laboratory protocols. Whereas some authors regard different measures of impulsivity as reflecting fundamentally distinct and unrelated behavioral tendencies (fragmentation approach), others regard those different indexes as analogue ...