Factor Analytically Derived Components of Orienting, Defensive, and Conditioned Behavior in Electrodermal Conditioning
- 1 March 1972
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Psychophysiology
- Vol. 9 (2) , 199-209
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8986.1972.tb00754.x
Abstract
The hypothesis that conditioned electrodermal responses can be analyzed into separate components of orienting and conditioned behavior was tested with a factor analytical method. Multiple responses from 105 Ss in a long interstimulus interval paradigm were grouped into four blocks of 6 trials each, and a correlation matrix computed from intercorrelations between different multiple responses during four stages of training. The first analysis was performed on the CS, pre‐US, and post‐US responses, and resulted in three significant factors. The first one was defined by the CS response early in training and was interpreted as reflecting orienting behavior. The second factor was defined by the pre‐US response late in training and was interpreted as representing expectancy or preparatory processes. The third factor tentatively was designated as a conditioned response factor of defensive nature, since it was defined by the post‐US response late in training. This interpretation was confirmed in a second analysis which included the UR. Essentially, the factor structure from the first analysis was replicated, with the UR highly loaded in the third factor, which therefore was interpreted as reflecting defensive behavior.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- DIFFERENTIATION OF CONDITIONED AND ORIENTING RESPONSE COMPONENTS IN ELECTRODERMAL CONDITIONINGPsychophysiology, 1971
- THE EFFECTS OF AWARENESS AND SUCCESSIVE INHIBITION ON INTEROCEPTIVE AND EXTEROCEPTIVE CONDITIONING OF THE GALVANIC SKIN RESPONSEPsychophysiology, 1970
- ANTICIPATORY AND PREPARATORY ELECTRODERMAL BEHAVIOR IN PAIRED STIMULATION SITUATIONSPsychophysiology, 1969
- Learning and performance as a function of CS-intensity in a delayed GSR conditioning situation.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1968
- COMMENTS REGARDING MULTIPLE RESPONSE PHENOMENA IN LONG INTERSTIMULUS INTERVAL CONDITIONINGPsychophysiology, 1966
- Habituation: A model phenomenon for the study of neuronal substrates of behavior.Psychological Review, 1966
- NEURAL TIMING MECHANISMS, CONDITIONING, AND THE CS‐UCS INTERVALPsychophysiology, 1965
- Interstimulus interval effects in GSR discrimination conditioning.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1964
- A comparison of GSR fear responses produced by threat and electric shockJournal of Psychiatric Research, 1964