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Regular articles

Stimulus dependence and cross-modal interference in sequence learning

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Pages 2535-2547 | Received 28 Jul 2016, Accepted 25 Sep 2016, Published online: 28 Oct 2016
 

ABSTRACT

A central issue in sequence learning is whether learning operates on stimulus-independent abstract elements, or whether surface features are integrated, resulting in stimulus-dependent learning. Using the serial reaction-time (SRT) task, we test whether a previously presented sequence is transferrable from one domain to another. Contrary to previous artificial grammar learning studies, there is mapping between pre- and posttransfer stimuli, but contrary to previous SRT studies mapping is not obvious. In the pre-transfer training phase, participants face a dot-counting task in which the location of the dots follows a predefined sequence. In the test phase, participants face an auditory SRT task in which the spatial organization of the response locations is either the same as spatial sequence in the training phase, or not. Sequence learning is compared to two control conditions: one with a non-sequential random-dot counting in the training phase, and one with no training phase. Results show that sequential training proactively interferes with later sequence learning, regardless of whether the sequence is the same or different in the two phases. Results argue for the existence of a general sequence processor with limited capacity, and that sequence structures and sequenced elements are integrated into a single sequential representation.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful for the help and support of Ágnes Lukács, Kata Fazekas, and Krisztina Lukics.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. Note, however, that a newer study by Bregman, Patel, and Gentner (Citation2012) found accurate recognition of pitch-shifted songs in European starlings.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Swiss National Science Foundation [Internation Short Visit 157925 “Multi-Modal Sequence Learning” to Beat Meier and Ferenc Kemény], and Scientific Exchange Program, Swiss contribution to the new member states of the European Union [SCIEX-NMS.CH grant number 14.120 “MUST-Multimodal Sequences in Task Sequence Learning” to Beat Meier and Ferenc Kemény].

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