6533b850fe1ef96bd12a8571

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Evidence of the origin of specific spontaneous head turns during intertrial intervals.

Timo RuusuvirtaJuha ArikoskiTapani Korhonen

subject

Cultural Studiesmedicine.medical_specialtySocial PsychologyHead (linguistics)Conditioning ClassicalAlpha (ethology)AudiologyDevelopmental psychologyOrientationmedicineAnimalsAttentionSound LocalizationBackward conditioningApplied PsychologyBrain MappingMotivationCommunicationClassical conditioningExtinction (psychology)Electric StimulationPhilosophyAnthropologyHead MovementsHypothalamic Area LateralMental RecallCatsConditioningHead movementsMeasures of conditioned emotional responsePsychology

description

Direction and the frequency of spontaneous head movements during the ITIs following forward and backward paired trials were compared to an acquisition of a conditioned orienting (alpha) response directed to the side of the tone source. The head movements were analyzed from video recordings using classification of head turns to preferred and to nonpreferred directions. The results showed a significant increase in the alpha responses during the forward paired conditioning to the preferred direction and rapid extinction during the subsequent backward conditioning sessions. Spontaneous head movements during the ITIs increased to the same preferred direction as the conditioned alpha responses. The results of this experiment suggest that the response initially elicited by the CS can later appear as “spontaneous,” instrumental behavior, the form and the nature of which is determined by the characteristics of the conditioned alpha response developing as a result of classical conditioning.

10.1007/bf02690265https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9229239