Cognitive theories as reinforcement history surrogates: the case of likelihood ratio models of human recognition memory.

John T Wixted, Santino C Gaitan
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引用次数: 42

Abstract

B. F. Skinner (1977) once argued that cognitive theories are essentially surrogates for the organism's (usually unknown) reinforcement history. In this article, we argue that this notion applies rather directly to a class of likelihood ratio models of human recognition memory. The point is not that such models are fundamentally flawed or that they are not useful and should be abandoned. Instead, the point is that the role of reinforcement history in shaping memory decisions could help to explain what otherwise must be explained by assuming that subjects are inexplicably endowed with the relevant distributional information and computational abilities. To the degree that a role for an organism's reinforcement history is appreciated, the importance of animal memory research in understanding human memory comes into clearer focus. As Skinner was also fond of pointing out, it is only in the animal laboratory that an organism's history of reinforcement can be precisely controlled and its effects on behavior clearly understood.

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认知理论作为强化历史替代物:人类识别记忆的似然比模型。
b.f. Skinner(1977)曾认为,认知理论本质上是有机体(通常是未知的)强化历史的替代品。在本文中,我们认为这一概念相当直接地适用于一类人类识别记忆的似然比模型。问题的关键并不是这些模型从根本上有缺陷,或者它们没有用,应该被抛弃。相反,重点是强化历史在形成记忆决策中的作用,可以帮助解释必须通过假设受试者莫名其妙地被赋予相关的分布信息和计算能力来解释的事情。在某种程度上,生物体的强化历史的作用得到了认可,动物记忆研究在理解人类记忆方面的重要性变得更加清晰。正如斯金纳也喜欢指出的那样,只有在动物实验室里,一个有机体的强化历史才能被精确地控制,它对行为的影响才能被清楚地理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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