Stephan Koenig

Stephan Koenig
  • Dr.
  • University of Koblenz and Landau

About

30
Publications
3,791
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
397
Citations
Current institution
University of Koblenz and Landau

Publications

Publications (30)
Article
It has been suggested that attention modulates the speed at which cues come to predict contingent outcomes, and that attention changes with the prediction errors generated by cues. Evidence for this interaction in humans is inconsistent, with divergent findings depending on whether attention was measured with eye fixations or learning speed. We inc...
Preprint
Full-text available
We used an implicit learning paradigm to examine the acquisition of color-reward associations when colors were task-irrelevant and attention to color was detrimental to performance. Our task required a manual classification response to a shape target and a correct response was rewarded with either 1 or 10 cent. The amount of reward was contingent o...
Preprint
Binocular rivalry occurs when the eyes are presented with two dissimilar images and visual awareness fluctuates between them. Previous findings suggest that perceptual dominance of a rewarded stimulus may increase relative to an unrewarded stimulus, implying a direct effect of reward on visual representations. Here, we asked how uncertainty about r...
Preprint
Differences in fear conditioning between individuals suffering from chronic pain and healthy controls may indicate a learning bias that contributes to the acquisition and persistence of chronic pain. However, evidence from lab-controlled conditioning studies is sparse and previous experiments have produced inconsistent findings. Twenty-five partici...
Article
Full-text available
Differences in fear conditioning between individuals suffering from chronic pain and healthy controls may indicate a learning bias that contributes to the acquisition and persistence of chronic pain. However, evidence from lab-controlled conditioning studies is sparse and previous experiments have produced inconsistent findings. Twenty-five partici...
Article
We sought to provide evidence for a combined effect of two attentional mechanisms during associative learning. Participants' eye movements were recorded as they predicted the outcomes following different pairs of cues. Across the trials of an initial stage, a relevant cue in each pair was consistently followed by one of two outcomes, while an irrel...
Article
We investigated whether a sudden rise in prediction error widens an individual’s focus of attention by increasing ocular fixations on cues that otherwise tend to be ignored. To this end, we used a discrimination learning task including cues that were either relevant or irrelevant for predicting the outcomes. Half of participants experienced conting...
Article
Full-text available
The attentional learning theory of Pearce and Hall (1980) predicts more attention to uncertain cues that have caused a high prediction error in the past. We examined how the cue-elicited pupil dilation during associative learning was linked to such error-driven attentional processes. In three experiments, participants were trained to acquire associ...
Article
Full-text available
The present study explores the notion of an out-group fear learning bias that is characterized by a facilitated fear acquisition toward harm-doing out-group members. Participants were conditioned with two in-group and two out-group faces as conditioned stimuli. During acquisition, one in-group and one out-group face was paired with an aversive shoc...
Article
Full-text available
Stimuli in our sensory environment differ with respect to their physical salience but moreover may acquire motivational salience by association with reward. If we repeatedly observed that reward is available in the context of a particular cue but absent in the context of another cue the former typically attracts more attention than the latter. Howe...
Article
Full-text available
In human predictive learning, blocking, A+AB+, and a simple discrimination, UX+ VX-, result in a stronger response to the blocked, B, than the uninformative cue, X (where letters represent cues, and + and – represent different outcomes). In order to assess if these different treatments result in more attention being paid to blocked than uninformati...
Article
Full-text available
In three experiments, we investigated the contextual control of attention in human discrimination learning. In each experiment, participants initially received discrimination training in which the cues from Dimension A were relevant in Context 1 but irrelevant in Context 2, whereas the cues from Dimension B were irrelevant in Context 1 but relevant...
Article
Full-text available
We conducted a human fear conditioning experiment in which three different color cues were followed by an aversive electric shock on 0, 50, and 100% of the trials, and thus induced low (L), partial (P), and high (H) shock expectancy, respectively. The cues differed with respect to the strength of their shock association (L < P < H) and the uncertai...
Article
The relevance of a phobia-based conceptualization of fear for individuals with chronic pain has been much debated in the literature. The present study investigated whether highly fearful chronic low back pain (CLBP) patients show distinct physiological reaction patterns compared to less fearful patients when anticipating aversive back pain-related...
Article
Full-text available
In four human learning experiments (Pavlovian skin conductance, causal learning, speeded classification task), we evaluated several associative learning theories that assume either an elemental (modified unique cue model and Harris' model) or a configural (Pearce's configural theory and an extension of it) form of stimulus processing. The experimen...
Article
Full-text available
In two predictive-learning experiments, we investigated the role of the informational value of contexts for the formation of context-dependent behavior. During Phase 1 of each experiment, participants received either a conditional discrimination in which contexts were relevant (Group Relevant) or a simple discrimination in which contexts were irrel...
Article
Full-text available
In 3 human predictive learning experiments, we investigated whether the allocation of attention can come under the control of contextual stimuli. In each experiment, participants initially received a conditional discrimination for which one set of cues was trained as relevant in Context 1 and irrelevant in Context 2, and another set was relevant in...
Article
Full-text available
Experiment 1 compared the acquisition of a feature-positive and a feature-negative discrimination in humans. In the former, an outcome was signaled by two stimuli together, but not by one of these stimuli alone. In the latter, the outcome was signaled by one stimulus alone, but not by two stimuli together. Using a within-group design, the experimen...
Article
Full-text available
We report how the trajectories of saccadic eye movements are affected by memory interference acquired during associative learning. Human participants learned to perform saccadic choice responses based on the presentation of arbitrary central cues A, B, AC, BC, AX, BY, X, and Y that were trained to predict the appearance of a peripheral target stimu...
Article
Full-text available
ALTSim is a MATLAB-based simulator of several associative learning models, including Pearce's configural model, the extended configural model, the Rescorla-Wagner model, the unique cue hypothesis, the modified unique cue hypothesis, the replaced elements model, and Harris's elemental model. It allows for specifying all relevant parameters, as well...
Article
Full-text available
In two causal learning experiments with human participants, the authors compared various associative theories that assumed either elemental (unique cue, modified unique cue, replaced elements model, and Harris' model) or configural processing of stimuli (Pearce's theory and a modification of it). The authors used modified patterning problems initia...
Poster
Full-text available
In the conditional oculomotor learning task (Figure 1, left) the position of a visual peripheral target (US) is contingent on a preceding central cue (CS). In the course of training human subjects start to move their eyes in anticipation of the peripheral target. Similar to classical differential conditioning learning is evident in differential res...
Article
Stimuli presented with a low frequency elicit larger pupillary responses than those presented with a high frequency. Similar effects are known for motor responses observed in reaction time experiments. Utilizing this stimulus probability effect, we conducted a Go/NoGo reaction time experiment and measured pupillary dilation to evaluate categorizati...
Article
The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether the anticipatory pupillary dilation response is a useful indicator for the examination of complex differential conditioning problems like patterning. A human fear conditioning procedure with six groups (n=20 each) was used to examine conditioned stimulus (CS) processing when a compound stimulus w...
Poster
Full-text available
Stimuli presented with a low probability of occurrence elicit larger pupillary dilations than those presented with a high probability. This so-called stimulus probability effect is not driven by the stimulus itself, but by more central processes, such as expectations. The sensitivity of the pupil to stimulus probability might well provide interesti...
Poster
Full-text available
In two experiments we explored differential acquisition and extinction of anticipatory saccadic eye movements recorded by means of infrared video oculography.
Article
The way the eye travels during a saccade typically does not follow a straight line but rather shows some curvature instead. Converging empirical evidence has demonstrated that curvature results from conflicting saccade goals when multiple stimuli in the visual periphery compete for selection as the saccade target (Van der Stigchel, Meeter, & Theeuw...

Network

Cited By