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Dive into the research topics where Adam S. Bristol is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam S. Bristol.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes | 1998

OVERSHADOWING AND LATENT INHIBITION COUNTERACT EACH OTHER : SUPPORT FOR THE COMPARATOR HYPOTHESIS

Aaron P. Blaisdell; Adam S. Bristol; Lisa M. Gunther; Ralph R. Miller

In 4 conditioned lick suppression experiments with rats, the combined effects of latent inhibition treatment followed by overshadowing treatment were assessed as a test of the comparator hypothesiss (R.R. Miller & L.D. Matzel, 1988) explanations of overshadowing and latent inhibition. Experiments 1 and 2 confirmed the prediction of the comparator hypothesis that combined latent inhibition and overshadowing treatments attenuate the response deficit produced by either treatment alone. Furthermore, consistent with the comparator hypothesis, posttraining changes in the associative status of the putative comparator stimulus altered responding to the target conditioned stimulus (Experiment 3), and switching contexts between latent inhibition and overshadowing treatments (Experiment 4) eliminated the interaction between the latent inhibition and overshadowing treatments.


Animal Learning & Behavior | 2000

Biological significance attenuates overshadowing, relative validity, and degraded contingency effects

Philippe Oberling; Adam S. Bristol; Helena Matute; Ralph R. Miller

Miller and Matute (1996) showed that blocking is attenuated when the blocked conditioned stimulus (CS) is “biologically significant” (i.e., when the CS has the potential to elicit vigorous responding of any kind). To the extent that blocking is representative of cue competition, this finding suggests that biological significance protects CSs against cue competition effects in general. In the present experiments, we tested this possibility by examining the influence of biological significance of CSs on other examples of cue competition, namely, overshadowing, the relative stimulus validity effect, and the degraded contingency effect in rats. In Experiment 1, we found that intense auditory stimuli induced transient unconditioned lick suppression, thereby indicating that intense sounds were of high inherent biological significance. In Experiment 2A, we found that cues with high inherent biological significance were protected from overshadowing. In Experiment 2B, this finding was extended to cues with high acquired biological significance, which was obtained through prior pairings with a reinforcer of the valence opposite to that used in the overshadowing treatment. In Experiments 3 and 4, we found that cues with high inherent biological significance attenuated the relative validity effect and the degraded contingency effect, respectively. These results lend support to the view that biological significance (inherent and acquired) protects stimuli from cue competition effects, a finding that is problematic for many contemporary theories of learning.


Learning & Memory | 2005

Differential role of inhibition in habituation of two independent afferent pathways to a common motor output

Adam S. Bristol; Thomas J. Carew


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2001

Combined Effects of Intrinsic Facilitation and Modulatory Inhibition of Identified Interneurons in the Siphon Withdrawal Circuitry of Aplysia

Adam S. Bristol; Thomas M. Fischer; Thomas J. Carew


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2004

Neural Circuit of Tail-Elicited Siphon Withdrawal in Aplysia. I. Differential Lateralization of Sensitization and Dishabituation

Adam S. Bristol; Michael A. Sutton; Thomas J. Carew


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2004

Neural Circuit of Tail-Elicited Siphon Withdrawal in Aplysia. II. Role of Gated Inhibition in Differential Lateralization of Sensitization and Dishabituation

Adam S. Bristol; Stéphane Marinesco; Thomas J. Carew


Archive | 2015

Aplysia Neuromuscular Synapses in Mechanisms Involved in Persistent Facilitation of

Philip E. Lloyd; Adam S. Bristol; Stéphane Marinesco; Thomas J. Carew; Oliver R. Braubach; Amanda J.G. Dickinson; Carol C. E. Evans; Roger P. Croll


Encyclopedia of Special Education | 2014

Juberg‐Marsidi Syndrome

Adam S. Bristol


Encyclopedia of Special Education | 2014

Neuropathy, Giant Axonal

Adam S. Bristol


Archive | 2010

in Differential Lateralization of Sensitization and Dishabituation Neural Circuit of Tail-Elicited Siphon Withdrawal in Aplysia. II. Role of Gated Inhibition

Adam S. Bristol; Stéphane Marinesco; Thomas J. Carew

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Amanda J.G. Dickinson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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