A) Yes, a less salient odor CS should block a more salient taste CS when both are presented in compound.
B) No, a less salient odor CS enhances learning about a highly salient light CS when both are presented in compound.
C) Yes, a more salient taste CS should overshadow a less salient odor CS when both are presented in compound.
D) Sometimes, more salient taste CS acts as an occasion-setter, allowing the subject to determine whether or not the odor CS will predict illness.
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Multiple Choice
A) A module is developed as a result of an organism's experience with the environment.
B) A module is relatively encapsulated, as it tends to be unaffected by other modules.
C) A module is an inherited specialization to deal with a functional incompatibility.
D) A module is an example of a prepared behavior.
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Multiple Choice
A) The observation that distal odor versus proximal taste cues activate noncompeting defense systems cannot explain potentiation.
B) Standard within-compound associations explain why potentiation occurs while overshadowing occurs at other times.
C) Potentiation is unique to taste-odor combinations.
D) Salience differences of cues and their differential susceptibility to potentiation indicates that taste aversion learning is unique, as first suspected.
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Multiple Choice
A) Odor cues are distal stimuli and part of the skin defense system, whereas tastes are proximal cues and part of the gut defense system; thus the two cues do not interfere or compete with each other.
B) A standard within-compound association forms between odor and taste, just like with other stimuli outside the taste aversion paradigm.
C) As a result of evolution and the way organisms' sensory systems integrate input, organisms are "prepared" to learn odor-taste aversions.
D) Any relevant cue is more likely to show potentiation effects when it is very nonsalient and presented in compound with a strongly salient cue.
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A) to identify which features are crucial to sorting items into groups.
B) about which variables produce changes in other variables.
C) about the value of different outcomes as a function of their past experiences with outcomes.
D) to confront their preconceptions by being presented with information that conflicts with their expectations.
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Multiple Choice
A) LT + US; BT, no US
B) LB + US; BT, no US
C) LT + US; LT, no US
D) LT + US; L, no US; T, no US
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A) backward blocking.
B) taste-odor potentiation.
C) Perruchet effect.
D) category learning.
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Multiple Choice
A) the stimuli used in creating taste aversions are unusual and intense.
B) the stimuli are consistent with previous generations' experiences with eating cues and outcomes, associated with the gut defense system.
C) the stimuli persist in sensory memory much longer than the stimuli typically used in classical conditioning studies.
D) the stimuli are highly memorable and not prone to interference effects by other stimuli.
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Multiple Choice
A) more; more
B) less; more
C) more; less
D) less; less
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Multiple Choice
A) wing of a bird wing and the wing of a bat.
B) flipper of a seal and the wing of a bat.
C) leg and paw of a dog and the leg and foot of a human.
D) talons of a hawk and the claws of a bear.
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A) conditioned inhibition, because a safe cue can partially nullify a dangerous one.
B) conditioned excitation, because safety is an active process that induces drinking.
C) latent inhibition, because it is difficult to make a latently inhibited flavor dangerous.
D) habituation, because a safe cue has to be one that was once dangerous.
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Multiple Choice
A) it is most likely to occur when a familiar flavor is paired with illness.
B) it is more likely to occur as the interval between the exposure to a flavor and the onset of illness increases.
C) though acquired especially rapidly, the learning involved in taste aversions is similar to other forms of learning with highly salient and intense stimuli (e.g., fear) .
D) unlike other forms of learning, taste aversions show no spontaneous recovery following extinction.
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Multiple Choice
A) a change in the type of outcome associated with a CS (e.g., aversive to appetitive) during discrimination training.
B) a change in the value or appeal of a taste as a result of its being paired with a pleasant or unpleasant outcome.
C) the reduction in preference for a given taste that occurs from extensive exposure to that taste and no opportunity to experience other tastes.
D) response interaction or competition that occurs when appetitive and aversive motivation is used in the same group of subjects.
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Multiple Choice
A) beak of bird and the tail of the duckbill platypus
B) flipper of a seal and the wing of a bat
C) webbed feet of a duck and the fins of a fish
D) tail of a bird and the tail of a beaver
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Multiple Choice
A) it could enhance drinking of a flavor to which an aversion is conditioned.
B) bitter tastes will be much less preferred compared to water.
C) it will still taste hedonically bad.
D) it will be neither preferred nor aversive compared to water.
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Multiple Choice
A) causal power is replaced with associative strength.
B) the strength of a connection between nodes representing features and categories can be updated by same laws that govern classical conditioning.
C) once learning has occurred, causal power takes over to determine the final output.
D) when multiple features are activated they will produce blocking, potentiation, inhibition, and other standard learning phenomena.
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Multiple Choice
A) The influence of evolution on learned behaviors
B) The role of stimulus relevance on learning
C) The role of contextual interference on learning
D) The functional role of conditioning as an adaptation process
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