Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (25)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (25)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Journal article (13)
- Doctoral Thesis (12)
Keywords
- learning (25) (remove)
Institute
- Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (12)
- Institut für Psychologie (4)
- Graduate School of Life Sciences (3)
- Institut Mensch - Computer - Medien (2)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Psychiatrie, Psychosomatik und Psychotherapie (2)
- Neurologische Klinik und Poliklinik (1)
- Physikalisches Institut (1)
- Rudolf-Virchow-Zentrum (1)
Im Physikunterricht wurde lange Zeit die Bedeutung quantitativer Zusammenhänge für das Physiklernen überbewertet, qualitative Zusammenhänge spielten dagegen eine eher untergeordnete Rolle. Dies führte dazu, dass das Wissen der Schüler zumeist oberflächlich blieb und nicht auf neue Situationen angewendet werden konnte. TIMSS und Pisa offenbarten diese Schwierigkeiten. In den Abschlussberichten wurde kritisiert, dass die Schüler kaum in der Lage seien, Lernstoff zu transferieren oder problemlösend zu denken. Um physikalische Abläufe deuten und entsprechende Probleme lösen zu können, ist qualitativ-konzeptuelles Wissen nötig. Dieses kann, wie Forschungsergebnisse belegen, am besten durch die konstruktivistisch motivierte Gestaltung von Lernsituationen sowie durch die Integration externer Repräsentationen von Versuchsaussagen in den Schulunterricht erreicht werden. Eine konkrete Umsetzung dieser Bedingungen stellt der Einsatz rechnergestützter Experimente dar, der heutzutage ohne allzu großen technischen Aufwand realisiert werden kann. Diese Experimente erleichtern es dem Lernenden, durch den direkten Umgang mit realen Abläufen, physikalische Konzepte zu erschließen und somit qualitative Zusammenhänge zu verstehen. Während man lange Zeit von einer grundsätzlichen Lernwirksamkeit animierter Lernumgebungen ausging, zeigen dagegen neuere Untersuchungen eher Gegenteiliges auf. Schüler müssen offensichtlich erst lernen, wie mit multicodierten Repräsentationen zu arbeiten ist. Die vorliegende Arbeit will einen Beitrag dazu leisten, herauszufinden, wie lernwirksam sogenannte dynamisch-ikonische Repräsentationen (DIR) sind, die physikalische Größen vor dem Hintergrund konkreter Versuchsabläufe visualisieren. Dazu bearbeiteten im Rahmen einer DFG-Studie insgesamt 110 Schüler jeweils 16 Projekte, in denen mechanische Konzepte (Ort, Geschwindigkeit, Beschleunigung und Kraft) aufgegriffen wurden. Es zeigte sich, dass die Probanden mit den eingesetzten DIR nicht erfolgreicher lernen konnten als vergleichbare Schüler, die die gleichen Lerninhalte ohne die Unterstützung der DIR erarbeiteten. Im Gegenteil: Schüler mit einem geringen visuellen Vorstellungsvermögen schnitten aufgrund der Darbietung einer zusätzlichen Codierung schlechter ab als ihre Mitschüler. Andererseits belegen Untersuchungen von Blaschke, dass solche Repräsentationen in der Erarbeitungsphase einer neu entwickelten Unterrichtskonzeption auch und gerade von schwächeren Schülern konstruktiv zum Wissenserwerb genutzt werden konnten. Es scheint also, dass die Lerner zunächst Hilfe beim Umgang mit neuartigen Repräsentationsformen benötigen, bevor sie diese für den weiteren Aufbau adäquater physikalischer Modelle nutzen können. Eine experimentelle Untersuchung mit Schülern der 10. Jahrgangsstufe bestätigte diese Vermutung. Hier lernten 24 Probanden in zwei Gruppen die mechanischen Konzepte zu Ort, Geschwindigkeit und Beschleunigung kennen, bevor sie im Unterricht behandelt wurden. Während die Teilnehmer der ersten Gruppe nur die Simulationen von Bewegungsabläufen und die zugehörigen Liniendiagramme sahen, wurden für die zweite Gruppe unterstützend DIR eingesetzt, die den Zusammenhang von Bewegungsablauf und Liniendiagramm veranschaulichen sollten. In beiden Gruppen war es den Probanden möglich, Fragen zu stellen und Hilfe von einem Tutor zu erhalten. Die Ergebnisse zeigten auf, dass es den Schülern durch diese Maßnahme ermöglicht wurde, die DIR erfolgreich zum Wissenserwerb einzusetzen und signifikant besser abzuschneiden als die Teilnehmer in der Kontrollgruppe. In einer weiteren Untersuchung wurde abschließend der Frage nachgegangen, ob DIR unter Anleitung eines Tutors eventuell bereits in der Unterstufe sinnvoll eingesetzt werden können. Ausgangspunkt dieser Überlegung war die Tatsache, dass mit der Einführung des neuen bayerischen G8-Lehrplans wesentliche Inhalte, die Bestandteil der vorherigen Untersuchungen waren, aus dem Physikunterricht der 11. Jgst. in die 7. Jahrgangsstufe verlegt wurden. So bot es sich an, mit den Inhalten auch die DIR in der Unterstufe einzusetzen. Die Untersuchungen einer quasiexperimentellen Feldstudie in zwei siebten Klassen belegten, dass die betrachteten Repräsentationen beim Aufbau entsprechender Konzepte keinesfalls hinderlich, sondern sogar förderlich sein dürften. Denn die Schülergruppe, die mit Hilfe der DIR lernte, schnitt im direkten hypothesenprüfenden Vergleich mit der Kontrollklasse deutlich besser ab. Ein Kurztest, der die Nachhaltigkeit des Gelernten nach etwa einem Jahr überprüfen sollte, zeigte zudem auf, dass die Schüler der DIR-Gruppe die Konzepte, die unter Zuhilfenahme der DIR erarbeitet wurden, im Vergleich zu Schülern der Kontrollklasse und zu Schülern aus 11. Klassen insgesamt überraschend gut verstanden und behalten hatten.
Learning about informal fallacies and the detection of fake news: an experimental intervention
(2023)
The philosophical concept of informal fallacies–arguments that fail to provide sufficient support for a claim–is introduced and connected to the topic of fake news detection. We assumed that the ability to identify informal fallacies can be trained and that this ability enables individuals to better distinguish between fake news and real news. We tested these assumptions in a two-group between-participants experiment (N = 116). The two groups participated in a 30-minute-long text-based learning intervention: either about informal fallacies or about fake news. Learning about informal fallacies enhanced participants’ ability to identify fallacious arguments one week later. Furthermore, the ability to identify fallacious arguments was associated with a better discernment between real news and fake news. Participants in the informal fallacy intervention group and the fake news intervention group performed equally well on the news discernment task. The contribution of (identifying) informal fallacies for research and practice is discussed.
Like other animals flies develop a state of learned helplessness in response to unescapable aversive events. To show this, two flies, one 'master', one 'yoked', are each confined to a dark, small chamber and exposed to the same sequence of mild electric shocks. Both receive these shocks when the master fly stops walking for more than a second. Behavior in the two animals is differently affected by the shocks. Yoked flies are transiently impaired in place learning and take longer than master flies to exit from the chamber towards light. After the treatment they walk more slowly and take fewer and shorter walking bouts. The low activity is attributed to the fly's experience that its escape response, an innate behavior to terminate the electric shocks, does not help anymore. Earlier studies using heat pulses instead of electric shocks had shown similar effects. This parallel supports the interpretation that it is the uncontrollability that induces the state.
Behavioral adaptation to environmental changes is crucial for animals’ survival. The prediction of the outcome of one owns action, like finding reward or avoiding punishment, requires recollection of past experiences and comparison with current situation, and adjustment of behavioral responses. The process of memory acquisition is called learning, and the Drosophila larva came up to be an excellent model organism for studying the neural mechanisms of memory formation. In Drosophila, associative memories are formed, stored and expressed in the mushroom bodies. In the last years, great progress has been made in uncovering the anatomical architecture of these brain structures, however there is still a lack of knowledge about the functional connectivity.
Dopamine plays essential roles in learning processes, as dopaminergic neurons mediate information about the presence of rewarding and punishing stimuli to the mushroom bodies. In the following work, the function of a newly identified anatomical connection from the mushroom bodies to rewarding dopaminergic neurons was dissected. A recurrent feedback signaling within the neuronal network was analyzed by simultaneous genetic manipulation of the mushroom body Kenyon cells and dopaminergic neurons from the primary protocerebral anterior (pPAM) cluster, and learning assays were performed in order to unravel the impact of the Kenyon cells-to-pPAM neurons feedback loop on larval memory formation.
In a substitution learning assay, simultaneous odor exposure paired with optogenetic activation of Kenyon cells in fruit fly larvae in absence of a rewarding stimulus resulted in formation of an appetitive memory, whereas no learning behavior was observed when pPAM neurons were ablated in addition to the KC activation. I argue that the activation of Kenyon cells may induce an internal signal that mimics reward exposure by feedback activation of the rewarding dopaminergic neurons. My data further suggests that the Kenyon cells-to-pPAM communication relies on peptidergic signaling via short neuropeptide F and underlies memory stabilization.
More than 100 years ago, Karl von Frisch showed that honeybee workers learn and discriminate colors. Since then, many studies confirmed the color learning capabilities of females from various hymenopteran species. Yet, little is known about visual learning and memory in males despite the fact that in most bee species males must take care of their own needs and must find rewarding flowers to obtain food. Here we used the proboscis extension response (PER) paradigm to study the color learning capacities of workers and drones of the bumblebee, Bombus terrestris. Light stimuli were paired with sucrose reward delivered to the insects’ antennae and inducing a reflexive extension of the proboscis. We evaluated color learning (i.e. conditioned PER to color stimuli) in absolute and differential conditioning protocols and mid-term memory retention was measured two hours after conditioning. Different monochromatic light stimuli in combination with neutral density filters were used to ensure that the bumblebees could only use chromatic and not achromatic (e.g. brightness) information. Furthermore, we tested if bees were able to transfer the learned information from the PER conditioning to a novel discrimination task in a Y-maze. Both workers and drones were capable of learning and discriminating between monochromatic light stimuli and retrieved the learned stimulus after two hours. Drones performed as well as workers during conditioning and in the memory test, but failed in the transfer test in contrast to workers. Our data clearly show that bumblebees can learn to associate a color stimulus with a sugar reward in PER conditioning and that both workers and drones reach similar acquisition and mid-term retention performances. Additionally, we provide evidence that only workers transfer the learned information from a Pavlovian to an operant situation.
Does generation benefit learning for narrative and expository texts? A direct replication attempt
(2021)
Generated information is better recognized and recalled than information that is read. This so‐called generation effect has been replicated several times for different types of material, including texts. Perhaps the most influential demonstration was by McDaniel et al. (1986, Journal of Memory and Language, 25, 645–656; henceforth MEDC). This group tested whether the generation effect occurs only if the generation task stimulates cognitive processes not already stimulated by the text. Numerous studies, however, report difficulties replicating this text by generation‐task interaction, which suggests that the effect might only be found under conditions closer to the original method of MEDC. To test this assumption, we will closely replicate MEDC's Experiment 2 in German and English‐speaking samples. Replicating the effect would suggest that it can be reproduced, at least under limited conditions, which will provide the necessary foundation for future investigations into the boundary conditions of this effect, with an eye towards its utility in applied contexts.
Honeybees learn color information of rewarding flowers and recall these memories in future decisions. For fine color discrimination, bees require differential conditioning with a concurrent presentation of target and distractor stimuli to form a long-term memory. Here we investigated whether the long-term storage of color information shapes the neural network of microglomeruli in the mushroom body calyces and if this depends on the type of conditioning. Free-flying honeybees were individually trained to a pair of perceptually similar colors in either absolute conditioning towards one of the colors or in differential conditioning with both colors. Subsequently, bees of either conditioning groups were tested in non-rewarded discrimination tests with the two colors. Only bees trained with differential conditioning preferred the previously learned color, whereas bees of the absolute conditioning group, and a stimuli-naïve group, chose randomly among color stimuli. All bees were then kept individually for three days in the dark to allow for complete long-term memory formation. Whole-mount immunostaining was subsequently used to quantify variation of microglomeruli number and density in the mushroom-body lip and collar. We found no significant differences among groups in neuropil volumes and total microglomeruli numbers, but learning performance was negatively correlated with microglomeruli density in the absolute conditioning group. Based on these findings we aim to promote future research approaches combining behaviorally relevant color learning tests in honeybees under free-flight conditions with neuroimaging analysis; we also discuss possible limitations of this approach.q
In this thesis I studied psychological aspects in the behaviour of Drosophila, and especially Drosophila larvae. After an introduction where I present the general scientific context and describe the mechanisms of olfactory perception as well as of classical and operant conditioning, I present the different experiments that I realised during my PhD. Perception The second chapter deals with the way adult Drosophila generalise between single odours and binary mixtures of odours. I found that flies perceive a mixture of two odours as equally similar to the two elements composing it; and that the intensity as well as the physico-chemical nature of the elements composing a mixture affect the degree of generalisation between this mixture and one of its elements. These findings now call for further investigation on the physiological level, using functional imaging. Memory The third chapter presents a series of experiments in Drosophila larvae in order to define some characteristics of a new protocol for classical aversive learning which involves associating odours with mechanical disturbance as a punishment. The protocol and the first results should open new doors for the study of classical conditioning in Drosophila larvae, by allowing the comparison between two types of aversive memory (gustatory vs. mechanical reinforcement), including a comparison of their neurogenetic bases. It will also allow enquiries into the question whether these respective memories are specific for the kind of reinforcer used. Agency The fourth chapter documents our attempts to establish operant memory in Drosophila larvae. By analysing the first moments of the test, I could reveal that the larvae modified their behaviour according to their previous operant training. However, this memory seems to be quickly extinguished during the course of the test. We now aim at repeating these results and improving the protocol, in order to be able to systematically study the mechanisms allowing and underlying operant learning in Drosophila larvae. In the fifth chapter, I use the methods developed in chapter four for an analysis of larval locomotion. I determine whether larval locomotion in terms of speed or angular speed is affected by a treatment with the “cognitive enhancer” Rhodiola rosea, or by mutations in the Synapsin or SAP47 genes which are involved in the formation of olfactory memory. I also characterize the modifications induced by the presence of gustatory stimuli in the substrate on which the larvae are crawling. This thesis thus brings new elements to the current knowledge of Drosophila
A fundamental problem in deciding between mutually exclusive options is that the decision needs to be categorical although the properties of the options often differ but in grade. We developed an experimental handle to study this aspect of behavior organization. Larval Drosophila were trained such that in one set of animals odor A was rewarded, but odor B was not (A+/B), whereas a second set of animals was trained reciprocally (A/B+). We then measured the preference of the larvae either for A, or for B, or for “morphed” mixtures of A and B, that is for mixtures differing in the ratio of the two components. As expected, the larvae showed higher preference when only the previously rewarded odor was presented than when only the previously unrewarded odor was presented. For mixtures of A and B that differed in the ratio of the two components, the major component dominated preference behavior—but it dominated less than expected from a linear relationship between mixture ratio and preference behavior. This suggests that a minor component can have an enhanced impact in a mixture, relative to such a linear expectation. The current paradigm may prove useful in understanding how nervous systems generate discrete outputs in the face of inputs that differ only gradually.
Plants initially accepted by foraging leaf-cutting ants are later avoided if they prove unsuitable for their symbiotic fungus. Plant avoidance is mediated by the waste produced in the fungus garden soon after the incorporation of the unsuitable leaves, as foragers can learn plant odors and cues from the damaged fungus that are both present in the recently produced waste particles. We asked whether avoidance learning of plants unsuitable for the symbiotic fungus can take place entirely at the colony dump. In order to investigate whether cues available in the waste chamber induce plant avoidance in naïve subcolonies, we exchanged the waste produced by subcolonies fed either fungicide-treated privet leaves or untreated leaves and measured the acceptance of untreated privet leaves before and after the exchange of waste. Second, we evaluated whether foragers could perceive the avoidance cues directly at the dump by quantifying the visits of labeled foragers to the waste chamber. Finally, we asked whether foragers learn to specifically avoid untreated leaves of a plant after a confinement over 3 hours in the dump of subcolonies that were previously fed fungicide-treated leaves of that species. After the exchange of the waste chambers, workers from subcolonies that had access to waste from fungicide-treated privet leaves learned to avoid that plant. One-third of the labeled foragers visited the dump. Furthermore, naïve foragers learned to avoid a specific, previously unsuitable plant if exposed solely to cues of the dump during confinement. We suggest that cues at the dump enable foragers to predict the unsuitable effects of plants even if they had never been experienced in the fungus garden.