1 / 26

Experiment 2: Context generalization following delayed context shift

Experiment 2: Context generalization following delayed context shift. Hypothesis 1. It was hypothesized following an immediate delay subjects would be able to discriminate between two contexts

hayley
Download Presentation

Experiment 2: Context generalization following delayed context shift

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Experiment 2: Context generalization following delayed context shift

  2. Hypothesis 1 • It was hypothesized following an immediate delay subjects would be able to discriminate between two contexts • Subjects trained in context A and immediately tested in context B for would not run down the runway as quickly in B as they did in A; whereas subjects trained in context A and tested in context A would show little to no difference in their time to run down a run way

  3. Hypothesis 2 • It was hypothesized following an longer delay subjects would generalize the two contexts as indicated by similar performance between the two groups • Subjects trained in context A and tested in context B a week later would run down the runway as quickly in B as they initially did in A suggesting that the subjects generalized the two contexts; similarly subjects trained in context A and tested in context A would show little to no difference in their time to run down a run way

  4. Subjects • 16 female Long-Evans rats approximately 90-120 days old • Subjects were quasi-randomly assigned to one of four groups (n=4 per group)

  5. Apparatus & Materials • Both runways had the following dimesions 61” long X 5” wide and the walls 4” high and contained a food cup at the end; food cup contained one fruit loop • Context A • Walls were gray • Floor was a wire grid • 44” off the floor • Covered with a plexiglass lid • Normal light conditions

  6. Apparatus & Materials • Context B • Walls were white • Floor was covered with coarse grit sandpaper • 24.5” off floor • No lid on top • Illuminated by three desk lamps • Contained lemon scent throughout

  7. Figure 1a & 1b Context A

  8. Figure 2a & 2b Context B

  9. Procedure • The first 3 days of the study were used as pre-testing in order to get the subjects acclimated to context A • Each day every subject was given 5 trials, a trial consisted of the subject starting at one end and running to the other end and ended once the subject began eating the fruit loop • Each subject was given 5 minutes per trial, if the subject failed to perform they would be removed and the next trial would begin • Once the subjects reached asymptotic performance all subjects were given one day of testing in context A in order to establish baseline performance • Each subject was given 3 trials

  10. Procedure • Following baseline testing subjects were quasi-randomly assigned to one of four groups (n=4 per group) • Each subject was given 3 trials • Two groups were either tested in context A or context B two days after baseline testing • The other two groups were tested in context A or context B one week after baseline testing

  11. Procedure • Initial performance as well as baseline performance was analyzed to determine whether there were any group differences • The dependent measure was the difference in time it took to run down the alley from baseline to testing • Averaged across 3 trials • Positive score indicates improved performance; subject running quicker • Negative score indicates that it took longer to reach the end

  12. Initial performance

  13. Initial performance

  14. Initial performance

  15. Initial performance • A context X delay X day repeated measures ANOVA demonstrated a significant effect of day F(2,24)=74.29, p <.05) and no significant group or delay differences (p’s >.05) • This suggests that all subjects were performing similar prior to any experimental manipulation, but were demonstrating improved performance by the final day of pretesting as indicated by a reduced time to reach the end of the alley

  16. Baseline

  17. Baseline

  18. Baseline

  19. Baseline • A context X delay ANOVA demonstrated no significant differences between any of the groups (p’s >.05) • This suggests that during baseline testing there were no significant difference between any of the subjects’ performance

  20. Mean difference from baseline * p<.05

  21. Mean difference from baseline

  22. Mean difference from baseline

  23. Mean difference from baseline • A context X delay ANOVA found a significant main effect for context , F(1,12) = 8.35and delay F(1,12) = 8.35, as well as a significant context X delay interaction F(1,12) = 15.78, p’s<.05 • The significant effect of context indicates that subjects tested in a different context performed significantly poorer, as indicated by a slower running time during testing • The significant effect of delay suggests that subjects tested immediately following baseline testing were able to discriminate between the two contexts • The significant context X delay interaction suggests that subjects tested in a different context 2 days after baseline are able to discriminate between the two environments whereas subjects tested in the different context 1 week later is generalizing the different context as indicated by similar performance to subjects tested in the same environment as baseline at both 2 days and 1 week

  24. Some extra information • There are numerous books and articles about this topic • Generalization and discrimination of context • Recall cues • Contextual learning • Remember to discuss this in an overall context, don’t just simply regurgitate try to integrate • The challenge in this is to try to relate this to other aspects of the literature or even find conflicting studies • In other words why are our findings important, what can people take from this study

  25. Some extra information • An important paper • Gisquet-Verrier, P., & Alexinsky, T. (1986). Does contextual change determine long-term forgetting? Animal Learning & Behavior, 14(4), 349-358. • Can use this, but it can’t count towards the two paper min. requirement (but it is very useful) • http://www.psychonomic.org/search/view.cgi?id=10855

  26. Some extra information • Remember if you need help ask

More Related