4.1 Article

Does affective learning exist in the absence of contingency awareness?

Journal

LEARNING AND MOTIVATION
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 84-99

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1006/lmot.2000.1066

Keywords

affective learning; startle; skin conductance; Pavlovian conditioning

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The proposal that affective learning, the learning of likes and dislikes, can exist in the absence of contingency awareness, whereas signal learning, the learning of stimulus relationships, cannot, was investigated in a differential conditioning paradigm that was embedded in a visual masking task. Startle magnitude modulation and changes in verbal ratings served as measures of affective learning, whereas skin conductance was taken to reflect signal learning. Awareness was assessed online with an expectancy dial and in a postexperimental questionnaire. Both between-subject comparisons of verbalizers and nonverbalizers and within-subject comparisons of verbalizers before and after verbalization failed to reveal any evidence for learning, whether affective or otherwise, in the absence of knowledge of the stimulus contingencies. (C) 2001 Academic Press.

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