Farley_2004_Learn.Behav_32_277

Reference

Title : Chemosensory conditioning in molluscs: II. A critical review - Farley_2004_Learn.Behav_32_277
Author(s) : Farley J , Jin I , Huang H , Kim JI
Ref : Learn Behav , 32 :277 , 2004
Abstract :

We critically review chemosensory conditioning studies with molluscs and find that, in many studies, the influence of nonassociative processes complicates, obscures, and renders ambiguous the unique contribution of associative learning. These nonassociative processes include sensory adaptation, habituation, sensitization, and changes in feeding motivation. They arise from both the food extracts that have often been used as conditioned stimuli and the aversive stimuli that have been used as unconditioned stimuli.

PubMedSearch : Farley_2004_Learn.Behav_32_277
PubMedID: 15672823

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Citations formats

Farley J, Jin I, Huang H, Kim JI (2004)
Chemosensory conditioning in molluscs: II. A critical review
Learn Behav 32 :277

Farley J, Jin I, Huang H, Kim JI (2004)
Learn Behav 32 :277