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Dive into the research topics where Edgar H. Vogel is active.

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Featured researches published by Edgar H. Vogel.


Animal Learning & Behavior | 2001

A comparison of the Rescorla-Wagner and Pearce models in a negative patterning and a summation problem

Karyn M. Myers; Edgar H. Vogel; Jennifer Shin; Allan R. Wagner

In two experiments, we examined two related conditioning problems previously investigated by Red-head and Pearce (1995a) and Pearce, Aydin, and Redhead (1997). Experiment 1 involved an A+, B+, C+, AB+, AC+, BC+, ABC2 discrimination. The Rescorla-Wagner model predicts that response to AB, AC, and BC will be greater than that to A, B, and C at asymptote, whereas the Pearce model makes the opposite prediction. In Experiment 2, we investigated the responding to a novel ABC compound in groups trained with either A+, B+, C+ or AB+, AC+, BC+. The Rescorla-Wagner model predicts greater response to ABC in the group trained with A+, B+, C+ than in the group trained with AB+, AC+, BC+, whereas the Pearce model makes the opposite prediction. In contrast to the findings of Redhead and Pearce (1995a) and Pearce et al. (1997) in pigeon autoshaping, our findings in rabbit eyelid conditioning support the Rescorla-Wagner model.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2004

Quantitative models of Pavlovian conditioning

Edgar H. Vogel; María E Castro; María Angélica Sotomayor Saavedra

Over the last few years, research on learning and memory has become increasingly interdisciplinary. In the past, theories of learning, as a prerogative of psychologists, were generally formulated in purely verbal terms and evaluated exclusively at the behavioral level. At present, scientists are trying to build theories with a quantitative and biological flavor, seeking to embrace more complex behavioral phenomena. Pavlovian conditioning, one of the simplest and ubiquitous forms of learning, is especially suited for this multiple level analysis (i.e., quantitative, neurobiological, and behavioral), in part because of recent discoveries showing a correspondence between behavioral phenomena and associative properties at the cellular and systems levels, and in part because of its well established quantitative theoretical tradition. The present review, examines the mayor quantitative theories of Pavlovian conditioning and the phenomena to which they have been designed to account. In order to provide researchers from different disciplines with a simple guideline about the rationale of the different theoretical choices, all the models are described through a single formalism based on the neural network connectionist perspective.


Physiology & Behavior | 2005

Stimulus specificity in the habituation of the startle response in the rat

Edgar H. Vogel; Allan R. Wagner

A series of experiments evaluated whether the habituation of the startle response of the rat to tactile and auditory cues is stimulus specific. Experiment 1 showed stimulus specificity of a short-term habituation effect, whereby the startle to the second of a pair of stimuli was significantly less when the initial stimulus involved the same rather than the different modality. Experiments 2 and 3 focused on the more persistent decrement in startle that is a result of repeated stimulation, and demonstrated that such long-term habituation to the tactile and auditory stimuli contained a stimulus specific component in addition to a generalized component. The generalized habituation observed between the tactile and auditory stimuli in the three experiments may be due to an auditory accompaniment of the tactile stimulus employed. Discussion emphasized the utility of investigating habituation in a preparation with robust specificity.


Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2009

Generality of the summation effect in human causal learning

Fabian A. Soto; Edgar H. Vogel; Ramón D. Castillo; Allan R. Wagner

Considerable research has examined the contrasting predictions of the elemental and configural association theories proposed by Rescorla and Wagner (1972) and Pearce (1987), respectively. One simple method to distinguish between these approaches is the summation test, in which the associative strength attributed to a novel compound of two separately trained cues is examined. Under common assumptions, the configural view predicts that the strength of the compound will approximate to the average strength of its components, whereas the elemental approach predicts that the strength of the compound will be greater than the strength of either component. Different studies have produced mixed outcomes. In studies of human causal learning, Collins and Shanks (2006) suggested that the observation of summation is encouraged by training, in which different stimuli are associated with different submaximal outcomes, and by testing, in which the alternative outcomes can be scaled. The reported experiments further pursued this reasoning. In Experiment 1, summation was more substantial when the participants were trained with outcomes identified as submaximal than when trained with simple categorical (presence/absence) outcomes. Experiments 2 and 3 demonstrated that summation can also be obtained with categorical outcomes during training, if the participants are encouraged by instruction or the character of training to rate the separately trained components with submaximal ratings. The results are interpreted in terms of apparent performance constraints in evaluations of the contrasting theoretical predictions concerning summation.


Archive | 2002

Computational Theories of Classical Conditioning

Susan E. Brandon; Edgar H. Vogel; Allan R. Wagner

Computational theories of classical conditioning are theories whose propositions are stated as mathematical relationships. From such propositions one can compute, that is to say, deduce, presumed consequences for conditioned responding in circumstances addressed by the theory. This chapter is an attempt to roughly categorize and briefly summarize the major computational theories that have been developed to understand behavior in classical conditioning. It is organized around the essential ideas about conditioning that the various theories embrace. This chapter is not intended to provide a relative evaluation of the theories mentioned; to do so is considerably beyond the scope of what can be accomplished in the space available. Data are mentioned and judgments made, but only to provide understanding of the inspiration for the different models.


Terapia psicológica | 2010

Psychology and Natural Disasters: Earthquake and Tsunami in Chile on February 27,2010

Edgar H. Vogel; Pablo Vera-Villarroel

Esta edicion especial de Terapia Psicologica surge como un intento por sistematizar la informacion preliminar recolectada por investigadores acerca de las consecuencias psicologicas del desastre natural ocurrido en la zona centro sur de Chile el 27 de Febrero de 2010. Esta edicion tambien se focaliza en las formas de intervencion psicologica que se han aplicado en la distintas zonas devastadas, enfatizandose, ademas, la necesidad de concebir intervenciones para los efectos de mediano y largo plazo de este fenomeno. Por ultimo, se revisan estrategias utilizadas en otros paises para abordar desastres naturales.


Behavioural Processes | 2008

Configural and elemental processing in associative learning: commentary on Melchers, Shanks and Lachnit.

Allan R. Wagner; Edgar H. Vogel

The paper by Melchers, Shanks, and Lachnit (2007) reviews the available evidence suggesting that there is flexible processing, such that some associative learning tasks can be solved either configurally or elementally. We find the evidence provocative but limited in its demonstrated generality and silent with respect to the theoretical mechanisms that might regulate the alleged flexibility of processing. Further research is invited to determine the scope of the variation involved and how best to account for it. At present, theories, either elemental or configural, that include mechanisms to shift the weight assigned to component stimuli appear to be potential candidates for embracing the data.


Biological Research | 2011

Habituation of the eyeblink response in humans with stimuli presented in a sequence of incremental intensity

Fernando P. Ponce; Gonzalo R. Quintana; Andrew S Philominraj; Edgar H. Vogel

In an experiment we examined whether the repeated presentation of tones of gradually increasing intensities produces greater decrement in the eyeblink reflex response in humans than the repetition of tones of constant intensities. Two groups of participants matched for their initial level of response were exposed to 110 tones of 100-ms duration. For the participants in the incremental group, the tones increased from 60- to 90- dB in 3-dB steps, whereas participants in the constant group received the tones at a fixed 90-dB intensity. The results indicated that the level of response in the last block of 10 trials, in which both groups received 90-dB tones, was significantly lower in the incremental group than in the constant group. These findings support the data presented by Davis and Wagner (7) with the acoustic response in rats, but differ from several reports with autonomic responses in humans, where the advantage of the incremental condition has not been observed unambiguously. The discussion analyzes theoretical approaches to this phenomenon and the possible involvement of separate neural circuits.


Behavioural Processes | 2017

A theoretical analysis of transfer of occasion setting: SOP with replaced elements

Edgar H. Vogel; Fernando P. Ponce; Allan R. Wagner

The available data on occasion setting led Susan Brandon and Allan Wagner (Brandon and Wagner, 1998; Wagner and Brandon, 2001) to formulate what has come to be known as a replaced-elements conception (REM) of context-dependent cues within the SOP model (Wagner, 1981). In the present paper, we review the development of the theory, and show how, with a few congenial assumptions about shared cues, it can address some of the major regularities concerning when the transfer of occasion setting does or does not occur. Among the particular examples are the relatively unique transfers that have been reported to occur between separate serial discriminations and between targets that have been trained with the same versus different reinforcers.


Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology | 2015

Cue competition effects in human causal learning

Edgar H. Vogel; Jacqueline Y. Glynn; Allan R. Wagner

Five experiments involving human causal learning were conducted to compare the cue competition effects known as blocking and unovershadowing, in proactive and retroactive instantiations. Experiment 1 demonstrated reliable proactive blocking and unovershadowing but only retroactive unovershadowing. Experiment 2 replicated the same pattern and showed that the retroactive unovershadowing that was observed was interfered with by a secondary memory task that had no demonstrable effect on either proactive unovershadowing or blocking. Experiments 3a, 3b, and 3c demonstrated that retroactive unovershadowing was accompanied by an inflated memory effect not accompanying proactive unovershadowing. The differential pattern of proactive versus retroactive cue competition effects is discussed in relationship to amenable associative and inferential processing possibilities.

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Fabian A. Soto

Florida International University

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Christian Berger Gutiérrez

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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