Dissociating the roles of episodic retrieval and contingency awareness in valence contingency learning
This article is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review [What does this mean?].
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Giesen, Carina G.
Duderstadt, Hannah
Richter, Jasmin
Rothermund, Klaus
Abstract / Description
In the valence contingency learning task (VCT), participants evaluate target words which are preceded by nonwords. Nonwords are predictive for positive/negative evaluations. Previous studies demonstrated that this results in (a) reliable contingency learning effects, reflected in better performance for highly contingent nonword-valence pairings and (b) less reliable evaluative conditioning (EC) effects, reflected in more positive ratings of nonwords that were highly predictive of positive (vs. negative) evaluative responses. In a highly-powered (N=129) preregistered study, we investigated both effects and assessed whether they are a consequence of episodic retrieval of incidental stimulus-response (SR) episodes and/or propositional learning (indicated by contingency awareness). Participants were either explicitly instructed about contingencies (instructed learning group) or not (incidental learning group). Both groups then worked through the VCT, an explicit rating task, and a contingency awareness test. Both groups showed contingency learning effects and EC effects for nonwords. Multi-level analyses showed that controlling for previous SR co-occurrences fully accounted for contingency learning effects in the incidental learning group. In the instructed learning group, a residual effect of genuine valence contingency learning remained. Nonword-specific contingency awareness in turn fully accounted for EC effects in both learning groups, indicating that genuine contingency learning effects reflect propositional learning.
Keyword(s)
contingency learning evaluative conditioning stimulus-response episodes episodic retrieval contingency awareness propositional learningPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2024-12-13
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
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Giesen Duderstadt Richter Rothermund_Dec2024.pdfAdobe PDF - 493.02KBMD5: 5bf37863e5799fa83b38bb0129c56199Description: Manuscript under reviewRationale for choice of sharing level: Many ongoing studies use the same method/rationale of analyzes. As the method is relatively new and review processes tediously slow, I'd wish to make the findings available for interested readers who want to learn more about the present approach.
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Giesen, Carina G.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Duderstadt, Hannah
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Richter, Jasmin
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Rothermund, Klaus
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2024-12-13T09:52:59Z
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Made available on2024-12-13T09:52:59Z
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Date of first publication2024-12-13
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Submission date2024-06-18
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Abstract / DescriptionIn the valence contingency learning task (VCT), participants evaluate target words which are preceded by nonwords. Nonwords are predictive for positive/negative evaluations. Previous studies demonstrated that this results in (a) reliable contingency learning effects, reflected in better performance for highly contingent nonword-valence pairings and (b) less reliable evaluative conditioning (EC) effects, reflected in more positive ratings of nonwords that were highly predictive of positive (vs. negative) evaluative responses. In a highly-powered (N=129) preregistered study, we investigated both effects and assessed whether they are a consequence of episodic retrieval of incidental stimulus-response (SR) episodes and/or propositional learning (indicated by contingency awareness). Participants were either explicitly instructed about contingencies (instructed learning group) or not (incidental learning group). Both groups then worked through the VCT, an explicit rating task, and a contingency awareness test. Both groups showed contingency learning effects and EC effects for nonwords. Multi-level analyses showed that controlling for previous SR co-occurrences fully accounted for contingency learning effects in the incidental learning group. In the instructed learning group, a residual effect of genuine valence contingency learning remained. Nonword-specific contingency awareness in turn fully accounted for EC effects in both learning groups, indicating that genuine contingency learning effects reflect propositional learning.en
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Publication statusother
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Review statusnotReviewed
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/11179
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.15759
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchives
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Keyword(s)contingency learning
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Keyword(s)evaluative conditioning
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Keyword(s)stimulus-response episodes
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Keyword(s)episodic retrieval
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Keyword(s)contingency awareness
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Keyword(s)propositional learning
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleDissociating the roles of episodic retrieval and contingency awareness in valence contingency learningen
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DRO typepreprint