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Overshadowing and blocking of the...
Journal article

Overshadowing and blocking of the orientation-contingent color aftereffect: Evidence for a conditioning mechanism

Abstract

Orientation-contingent color aftereffects have been interpreted by nonassociative mechanisms (adaptation of neural units that are both color and orientation specific) and by associative mechanisms (conditioning resulting from the pairing of pattern and hue). To evaluate associative accounts, contingent aftereffects were induced by exposing subjects to compound chromatic grid patterns consisting of two component gratings: one was horizontal or vertical, and the other a left- or right-learning diagonal. The ability of a component grating to elicit a color aftereffect depended on the relative salience and the aftereffect training history of the grating components. That is, orientation-contingent color aftereffects, like other conditional responses, display overshadowing and blocking. The results suggest that conditioning contributes to these aftereffects.

Authors

Siegel S; Allan LG

Journal

Learning and Motivation, Vol. 16, No. 2, pp. 125–138

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 1985

DOI

10.1016/0023-9690(85)90008-6

ISSN

0023-9690
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