Human agency and associative learning: Pavlovian principles govern social process in causal relationship detection

被引:11
|
作者
Cramer, RE [1 ]
Weiss, RF
William, R
Reid, S
Nieri, L
Manning-Ryan, B
机构
[1] Calif State Univ San Bernardino, Dept Psychol, San Bernardino, CA 92407 USA
[2] Univ Oklahoma, Dept Psychol, Norman, OK 73019 USA
[3] Calif Sch Profess Psychol, Los Angeles, CA USA
关键词
D O I
10.1080/02724990143000289
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Estimates of a worker's causal relationship (CR) to production obeyed associative principles, despite the participants' a priori beliefs that workers are responsible or "at cause" for production. In three experiments, social analogues of conditioned stimuli (workers) and unconditioned stimuli (company production information) were manipulated in familiar Pavlovian paradigms. The findings included (1) CR acquisition, (2) unconditioned stimulus-intensity effects, and (3) CR blocking. The research plan employed an approach that Neal Miller (1959) termed "extension of liberalized S-R theory" and drew on the Rescorla-Wagner model to integrate the experimental results, to illuminate the empirical data of social attribution research, and to guide the study of causal relationship detection using social stimuli.
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页码:241 / 266
页数:26
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