Differential Context-Specificity in the Habituation of the Eyeblink and Cardiac Responses in Humans
Wagner (1978) proposed that habituation, defined as a decrease in respondin to a repeated stimulus, would depend on the formation of an association between the stimulus and the context. According to this approach, habituation should be context-specific; that is, a response that was habituated in a g...
Autor Principal: | Pinto, Jorge A; Universidad de Talca |
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Otros Autores: | Becerra, Sebastián A; Universidad de Talca, Ponce, Fernando P; Universidad de Talca, Vogel, Edgar H; Universidad de Talca |
Formato: | info:eu-repo/semantics/article |
Idioma: | spa |
Publicado: |
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
2014
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: |
http://revistas.javeriana.edu.co/index.php/revPsycho/article/view/4146 |
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Sumario: |
Wagner (1978) proposed that habituation, defined as a decrease in respondin to a repeated stimulus, would depend on the formation of an association between the stimulus and the context. According to this approach, habituation should be context-specific; that is, a response that was habituated in a given context should dishabituate when the stimulus is presented in a novel context. This hypothesis was examined in an experiment in which a group of students received a habituation session consisting of 60 repetitions of a stimulus capable of evoking eyeblink and heart-rate acceleration reactions. Subsequently, in a testing session the amplitude of these responses was examined by presenting the stimulus in the same context used in the habituation session (Group Same) or in an alternative context (Group Different). The results provided evidence of differential context-specificity for the two responses, since the heart-rate acceleration response was diminished in the group same but not in the group different (revealing specificity), while the eyeblink response was diminished in both groups (revealing no specificity). These findings are consistent with previous observations in rats demonstrating that the contextual control of habituation depends on the nature of the measured response. |
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