4.5 Article

Explaining Compound Generalization in Associative and Causal Learning Through Rational Principles of Dimensional Generalization

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW
Volume 121, Issue 3, Pages 526-558

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0037018

Keywords

generalization; associative learning; causal learning; Bayesian model; dimensional separability

Funding

  1. fellowship for the Advanced Course in Computational Neuroscience Internship Program
  2. Sage Center Junior Research Fellowship
  3. National Science Foundation
  4. National Institute of Mental Health Grant [R01MH098861]
  5. Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship

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How do we apply learning from one situation to a similar, but not identical, situation? The principles governing the extent to which animals and humans generalize what they have learned about certain stimuli to novel compounds containing those stimuli vary depending on a number of factors. Perhaps the best studied among these factors is the type of stimuli used to generate compounds. One prominent hypothesis is that different generalization principles apply depending on whether the stimuli in a compound are similar or dissimilar to each other. However, the results of many experiments cannot be explained by this hypothesis. Here, we propose a rational Bayesian theory of compound generalization that uses the notion of consequential regions, first developed in the context of rational theories of multidimensional generalization, to explain the effects of stimulus factors on compound generalization. The model explains a large number of results from the compound generalization literature, including the influence of stimulus modality and spatial contiguity on the summation effect, the lack of influence of stimulus factors on summation with a recovered inhibitor, the effect of spatial position of stimuli on the blocking effect, the asymmetrical generalization decrement in overshadowing and external inhibition, and the conditions leading to a reliable external inhibition effect. By integrating rational theories of compound and dimensional generalization, our model provides the first comprehensive computational account of the effects of stimulus factors on compound generalization, including spatial and temporal contiguity between components, which have posed long-standing problems for rational theories of associative and causal learning.

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