Hippocampal lesions disrupt an associative mismatch process

RC Honey, A Watt, M Good - Journal of Neuroscience, 1998 - Soc Neuroscience
Novel assays were used to assess inter alia whether the hippocampus is involved in detecting
novelty per se or in an associative mismatch process. During training, rats received two …

Imprinting, learning and development: from behaviour to brain and back

JJ Bolhuis, RC Honey - Trends in Neurosciences, 1998 - cell.com
Neural and behavioural analyses have shown that the formation of filial preferences in
young, precocial birds involves at least two separate processes. One process is an emerging …

Conditioning and contextual retrieval in hippocampal rats.

M Good, RC Honey - Behavioral neuroscience, 1991 - psycnet.apa.org
… , 1989, Experiments 2 & 4) and autoshaped responding in pigeons (Honey et al., 1990) …
(Hall & Honey, 1990, Experiment 3; for further discussion of this issue see Hall & Honey, 1990). It …

Selective hippocampal lesions abolish the contextual specificity of latent inhibition and conditioning.

RC Honey, M Good - Behavioral neuroscience, 1993 - psycnet.apa.org
… The present study attempted to replicate and extend the results of Good and Honey (1991)
in two ways. First, we examined whether hippocampal lesions disrupt context-specific …

Contextual effects in conditioning, latent inhibition, and habituation: Associative and retrieval functions of contextual cues.

G Hall, RC Honey - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal …, 1989 - psycnet.apa.org
Rats were used as subjects in four experiments to investigate the transfer of learning from
one context to another. Subjects received two sessions of training each day, one in each of …

Acquired equivalence and distinctiveness of cues.

RC Honey, G Hall - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal …, 1989 - psycnet.apa.org
… Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to RC Honey, Department
of Psychology, University of York, Heslington, York YO1 5DD, United Kingdom …

Context-but not familiarity-dependent forms of object recognition are impaired following excitotoxic hippocampal lesions in rats.

…, P Barnes, V Staal, A McGregor, RC Honey - Behavioral …, 2007 - psycnet.apa.org
Dual-process models of recognition memory in animals propose that recognition memory is
supported by two independent processes that reflect the operation of distinct brain structures…

Higher-order conditioning: A critical review and computational model.

RC Honey, DM Dwyer - Psychological Review, 2022 - psycnet.apa.org
… Adapted from “HeiDI: A model for Pavlovian learning and performance with reciprocal
associations” by RC Honey, DM Dwyer, and AF Iliescu, 2020, Psychological Review, 127, pp. 829–…

Simultaneous presentation of similar stimuli produces perceptual learning in human picture processing.

ME Mundy, RC Honey, DM Dwyer - Journal of Experimental …, 2007 - psycnet.apa.org
Human participants received unsupervised exposure to difficult-to-discriminate stimuli (eg, A
and A′), created with a morphing procedure from photographs of faces, before learning a …

Dissociable effects of selective lesions to hippocampal subsystems on exploratory behavior, contextual learning, and spatial learning.

M Good, RC Honey - Behavioral neuroscience, 1997 - psycnet.apa.org
Rats received excitotoxic lesions of different subsystems within the hippocampal system--either
the hippocampus proper (cornu ammonis and dentate gyrus; hippocampal lesions) or …