Failures to replicate blocking are surprising and informative-Reply to Soto (2018)

Elisa Maes, Angelos-Miltiadis Krypotos, Yannick Boddez, Joaquín Matías Alfei Palloni, Rudi D'Hooge, Jan De Houwer, Tom Beckers

Onderzoeksoutput: Articlepeer review

9 Citaten (Scopus)

Samenvatting

The blocking effect has inspired numerous associative learning theories and is widely cited in the literature. We recently reported a series of 15 experiments that failed to obtain a blocking effect in rodents. On the basis of those consistent failures, we claimed that there is a lack of insight into the boundary conditions for blocking. In his commentary, Soto (2018) argued that contemporary associative learning theory does provide a specific boundary condition for the occurrence of blocking, namely the use of same-versus different-modality stimuli. Given that in 10 of our 15 experiments same-modality stimuli were used, he claims that our failure to observe a blocking effect is unsurprising. We disagree with that claim, because of theoretical, empirical, and statistical problems with his analysis. We also address 2 other possible reasons for a lack of blocking that are referred to in Soto's (2018) analysis, related to generalization and salience, and dissect the potential importance of both. Although Soto's (2018) analyses raises a number of interesting points, we see more merit in an empirically guided analysis and call for empirical testing of boundary conditions on blocking.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)603-610
Aantal pagina's8
TijdschriftJournal Of Experiment Psychology: General
Volume147
Nummer van het tijdschrift4
DOI's
StatusPublished - apr 2018

Bibliografische nota

(c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).

Vingerafdruk

Duik in de onderzoeksthema's van 'Failures to replicate blocking are surprising and informative-Reply to Soto (2018)'. Samen vormen ze een unieke vingerafdruk.

Citeer dit