A copy of this work was available on the public web and has been preserved in the Wayback Machine. The capture dates from 2017; you can also visit the original URL.
The file type is application/pdf
.
Additivity pretraining and cue competition effects: Developmental evidence for a reasoning-based account of causal learning
2012
Journal of Experimental Psychology Animal Behavior Processes
The effect of additivity pretraining on blocking has been taken as evidence for a reasoning account of human and animal causal learning. If inferential reasoning underpins this effect, then developmental differences in the magnitude of this effect in children would be expected. Experiment 1 examined cue competition effects in children's (4-to 5-year-olds and 6-to 7-year-olds) causal learning using a new paradigm analogous to the food allergy task used in studies of human adult causal learning.
doi:10.1037/a0027202
pmid:22329707
fatcat:27vckgmhhjf5xe5wsckdnapzli