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Delayed Feedback Disrupts the Procedural-Learning System but Not the Hypothesis-Testing System in Perceptual Category Learning.
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Citations
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References
2005
Year
Procedural-learning SystemCognitionCategory LearningAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyPerceptual Category LearningDelayed Feedback DisruptsMemoryPublic HealthCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesInformation Processing (Psychology)Human CognitionExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorDelayed FeedbackW. T. MaddoxProcedural MemoryCognitive Modeling
W. T. Maddox, F. G. Ashby, and C. J. Bohil (2003) found that delayed feedback adversely affects information-integration but not rule-based category learning in support of a multiple-systems approach to category learning. However, differences in the number of stimulus dimensions relevant to solving the task and perceptual similarity failed to rule out 2 single-system interpretations. The authors conducted an experiment that remedied these problems and replicated W. T. Maddox et al.'s findings. The experiment revealed a strong performance decrement for information-integration but not rule-based category learning under delayed feedback that was due to an increase in the number of observers using hypothesis-testing strategies to solve the information-integration task, and lower accuracy rates for the few observers using information-integration strategies.
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