That’s when we learn to associate one thing with another thing, like the ringing of a bell with food, in the famous example of Pavlov’s dog. The more times we experience the stimulus and the reward, ...
Forget everything you knew about practice making perfect. New research shows your brain is actually wired to learn faster ...
How we learn to predict an outcome isn’t determined by how many times a cue and reward happen together. Instead, how much ...
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Timing matters more than repetition in learning
More than a century ago, Pavlov trained his dog to associate the sound of a bell with food. Ever since, scientists assumed the dog learned this through repetition: The more times the dog heard the ...
Physicists have developed a dynamical model of animal behavior that may explain some mysteries surrounding associative learning going back to Pavlov's dogs. Physicists have developed a dynamical model ...
Linguistics and Philosophy, Vol. 29, No. 5 (Oct., 2006), pp. 587-615 (29 pages) We are going to explain partial blocking as the result of diachronic processes based on what we will call associative ...
More than a century ago, Pavlov trained his dog to associate the sound of a bell with food. Ever since, scientists assumed the dog learned this ...
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