» Articles » PMID: 10467589

Probabilistic Classification Learning in Amnesia

Overview
Journal Learn Mem
Specialty Neurology
Date 1994 Jul 1
PMID 10467589
Citations 188
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Amnesic patients and control subjects participated in a study of probabilistic classification learning. In each of three tasks, four different cues were each probabilistically associated with one of two outcomes. On each trial, the cues could appear alone or in combination with other cues and subjects selected the outcome they thought was correct. Feedback was provided after each trial. In each task, the amnesic patients learned gradually to associate the cues with the appropriate outcome at the same rate as control subjects, improving from 50% correct to approximately 65% correct. Presumably because the cue-outcome associations were probabilistic, declarative memory for the outcomes of specific trials was not as useful for performance as the information gradually accrued across trials. Nevertheless, declarative memory does appear to make a contribution to performance when training is extended beyond approximately 50 trials, because with further training control subjects eventually outperformed the amnesic patients. It was also demonstrated that performance on the probabilistic classification task was not the result of holding knowledge of cue-outcome associations in short-term memory, because both control subjects and amnesic patients demonstrated significant savings when testing was interrupted by a 5-min delay (experiment 2). Probabilistic classification learning appears to provide an analog in human subjects for the habit learning tasks that can be acquired normally by animals with hippocampal lesions.

Citing Articles

Effect of individual variations in genes related to dopamine brain transmission on performance with and without rewards during motor sequence and probabilistic learning tasks in children and young adults with and without cerebral palsy.

Dryden B, Matsubara J, Wassermann E, Forssberg H, Damiano D PLoS One. 2025; 20(1):e0314173.

PMID: 39787065 PMC: 11717210. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0314173.


Two types of motifs enhance human recall and generalization of long sequences.

Wu S, Thalmann M, Schulz E Commun Psychol. 2025; 3(1):3.

PMID: 39775029 PMC: 11707037. DOI: 10.1038/s44271-024-00180-8.


A dopaminergic basis of behavioral control.

Ballard I, Furman D, Berry A, White 3rd R, Jagust W, Kayser A bioRxiv. 2024; .

PMID: 39345422 PMC: 11429830. DOI: 10.1101/2024.09.17.613524.


Altered learning from positive feedback in adolescents with anorexia nervosa.

Uniacke B, van den Bos W, Wonderlich J, Ojeda J, Posner J, Steinglass J J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2024; 30(7):651-659.

PMID: 39291440 PMC: 11773347. DOI: 10.1017/S1355617724000237.


The effect of feedback timing on category learning and feedback processing in younger and older adults.

Nunn K, Creighton R, Tilton-Bolowsky V, Arbel Y, Vallila-Rohter S Front Aging Neurosci. 2024; 16:1404128.

PMID: 38887611 PMC: 11182045. DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2024.1404128.