ORCID
- Christopher Mitchell: 0000-0002-6793-5236
- A Wills: 0000-0003-4803-0367
Abstract
The Inverse Base Rate Effect (IBRE) is a non-rational behavioural phenomenon in predictive learning. In the IBRE,participants learn that a stimulus compound AB leads to one outcome and that another compound AC leads to a differentoutcome. Importantly, AB and its outcome are presented three times as often as AC (and its outcome). On test, when askedwhich outcome to expect on presentation of the novel compound BC, participants preferentially select the rarer outcome,previously associated with AC. This is irrational because, objectively, the common outcome is more likely. Usually, the IBREis attributed to greater attention paid to cue C than to cue B, and so is an excellent test for attentional learning models. Thecurrent experiment tested a simple account of attentional learning proposed by Le Pelley, Mitchell, Beesley, George, and Wills(2016) where attention paid to a stimulus is determined by its associative strength. This account struggles to capture the IBRE,but a potential solution presented by Le Pelley et al. (2016) appeals to the role of experimental context. In the present paper,we derived four predictions from the context explanation concerning the effect of changing to a novel experimental contextat test, and examined these predictions empirically. Only one of the predictions, concerning the effect of a context shift onresponding to a novel cue, was supported. These results fail to support both the context explanation suggested by Le Pelley etal. (2016) and the current leading account of the IBRE, EXIT (Kruschke, 2001b), but provide avenues for further research.
DOI Link
Publication Date
2022-04-25
Publication Title
Open Journal of Experimental Psychology and Neuroscience
Volume
1
Acceptance Date
2022-04-25
Deposit Date
2022-04-25
Embargo Period
2022-05-28
Additional Links
First Page
22
Last Page
29
Recommended Citation
Inkster, A., Mitchell, C., Schlegelmilch, R., & Wills, A. (2022) 'Effect of a context shift on the inverse base rate effect', Open Journal of Experimental Psychology and Neuroscience, 1, pp. 22-29. Available at: 10.46221/ojepn.2022.0404
