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"Familiarity-based stimulus generalization of conditioned suppression": Correction to Robinson, Whitt, and Jones (2017).

Reports an error in "Familiarity-based stimulus generalization of conditioned suppression" by Jasper Robinson, Emma J. Whitt and Peter M. Jones ( Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Learning and Cognition , 2017[Apr], Vol 43[2], 159-170). The article was incorrectly published under American Psychological Association copyright. The authors should have retained copyright of this article under the Creative Commons Attribution License. The online version of this article has been corrected. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2017-15338-002.) We report that stimulus novelty/familiarity is able to modulate stimulus generalization and discuss the theoretical implications of novelty/familiarity coding. Rats in Skinner boxes received clicker → shock pairings before generalization testing to a tone. Before clicker training, different groups of rats received preexposure treatments designed to systematically modulate the clicker and the tone's novelty and familiarity. Rats whose preexposure matched novelty/familiarity (i.e., either both or neither clicker and tone were preexposed) showed enhanced suppression to the tone relative to rats whose preexposure mixed novelty/familiarity (i.e., only clicker or tone was preexposed). This was not the result of sensory preconditioning to clicker and tone. (PsycINFO Database Record

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