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Related Concept Videos

Associative Learning01:27

Associative Learning

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Associative learning is a fundamental concept in behavioral psychology, wherein a connection is established between two stimuli or events, leading to a learned response. This process is critical in understanding how behaviors are acquired and modified. Conditioning, the mechanism through which associations are formed, can be divided into two main types: classical conditioning and operant conditioning, each elucidating different aspects of associative learning.
Classical conditioning, also known...
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Related Experiment Video

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Unlearning Incorrect Associations in Word Learning: Evidence From Eye-Tracking.

Tanja C Roembke1, Bob McMurray2

  • 1Institute of Psychology, RWTH Aachen University.

Cognitive Science
|June 11, 2025
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Word learning involves pruning incorrect meanings. This study shows that while weak associations are quickly unlearned, stronger ones persist, and unsupervised pruning also occurs, impacting language processing.

Keywords:
Negative associative learningPruningVocabulary acquisitionWord learning

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Science
  • Psycholinguistics
  • Neuroscience

Background:

  • Computational and animal models highlight the importance of unlearning incorrect word meanings for effective word acquisition.
  • The precise mechanisms of this pruning process, particularly the roles of supervised versus unsupervised learning, remain incompletely understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how incorrect word-object associations are pruned during the word learning process.
  • To differentiate the contributions of supervised and unsupervised learning to the unlearning of semantic representations.
  • To examine how the initial strength of incorrect mappings influences their subsequent pruning.

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments involving adult participants learning novel word-object mappings.
  • Utilized eye-tracking during training and testing to measure the activation of alternative word meanings.
  • Manipulated the frequency of incorrect pairings during pretraining to disentangle supervised and unsupervised pruning effects.

Main Results:

  • Weak incorrect associations were rapidly pruned, whereas stronger associations persisted even after successful word learning.
  • Evidence for unsupervised pruning was observed, indicating that unlearning can occur without direct corrective feedback.
  • The persistence of some incorrect associations suggests they may remain active in the lexicon post-learning.

Conclusions:

  • The degree of unlearning incorrect word meanings is dependent on the initial strength of their association.
  • Both supervised and unsupervised mechanisms contribute to the pruning of erroneous semantic representations.
  • Lingering incorrect associations may influence subsequent language processing, such as word recognition.