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Autonomic classical conditioning as a function of awareness of stimulus contingencies
Biological Physiology (1979)
  • Anne Schell, Occidental College
  • Michael E. Dawson
  • Jeffrey J. Catania
  • William W. Grings
Abstract
Two groups of 32 college students were presented compound CSs (lights and tones presented simultaneously) during a classical conditioning paradigm. By means of a masking task and verbal instructions, a partially informed group was made aware of only the visual CS's contingency with the UCS, while a fully informed group was made aware of both the visual and auditory contingencies. Autonomic indices of conditioning (electrodermal responses, heart rate, and digital pulse volume) were later measured to the individual component CSs and to various compound CSs. It was found that: (1) the partially informed group exhibited conditioning exclusively to the visual CS+ and to compounds which included the visual CS+, while (2) the fully informed group exhibited conditioning to both visual and auditory CS+s. The results confirm the importance of awareness in human autonomic discrimination classical conditioning. It is suggested that human autonomic conditioning may be usefully conceptualized as an information processing task with the autonomic indices of conditioning reflecting central cognitive processes.
Publication Date
July, 1979
Citation Information
Anne Schell, Michael E. Dawson, Jeffrey J. Catania and William W. Grings. "Autonomic classical conditioning as a function of awareness of stimulus contingencies" Biological Physiology Vol. 9 Iss. 1 (1979)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/anne_schell/16/