Psychology of Learning and Motivation, Volume 22Academic Press, 1989 M03 1 - 370 pages Psychology of Learning and Motivation |
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Page 10
... procedure, while still an accurate simulation of item selection, differed in several ways from that used by other investigators. Perhaps most important, all components of the schedule were fixed times, and handling time for all items ...
... procedure, while still an accurate simulation of item selection, differed in several ways from that used by other investigators. Perhaps most important, all components of the schedule were fixed times, and handling time for all items ...
Page 33
... trial vs. free operant procedures; variations in amount vs. delay of reinforcement. Animals that can go for hours or days without starving might be expected to have a less well-developed response Foraging and Operant Behavior 33 VII. Risk.
... trial vs. free operant procedures; variations in amount vs. delay of reinforcement. Animals that can go for hours or days without starving might be expected to have a less well-developed response Foraging and Operant Behavior 33 VII. Risk.
Page 34
... procedures (Hamm & Shettleworth, 1987). Under the same conditions of deprivation and rate of intake in our discretetrial procedure, they choose a variable delay to food over a fixed delay with the same mean (Shettleworth & Hamm ...
... procedures (Hamm & Shettleworth, 1987). Under the same conditions of deprivation and rate of intake in our discretetrial procedure, they choose a variable delay to food over a fixed delay with the same mean (Shettleworth & Hamm ...
Page 37
... procedure (Staddon & Reid, 1987; Timberlake & Peden, 1987; but see Collier et al., 1986). If unambiguous responses to time horizon were to be demonstrated, these would have implications for experiments in which closed and open economies ...
... procedure (Staddon & Reid, 1987; Timberlake & Peden, 1987; but see Collier et al., 1986). If unambiguous responses to time horizon were to be demonstrated, these would have implications for experiments in which closed and open economies ...
Page 54
... procedures. However, the conclusions drawn are sufficiently elemental that we expect they will prove applicable across a variety of tasks and species. In principle, all comprehensive theories concerning the processing of acquired ...
... procedures. However, the conclusions drawn are sufficiently elemental that we expect they will prove applicable across a variety of tasks and species. In principle, all comprehensive theories concerning the processing of acquired ...
Contents
1 | |
51 | |
Reinforcement Behavioral Stereotypy And Problem Solving | 93 |
Memory Performance And Phenomenological Appearance | 139 |
A Review And A New View | 193 |
Chapter 6 Strategic Control Of Retrieval Strategies | 227 |
Chapter 7 Alternative Representations | 261 |
Chapter 8 Evidence For Relational Selectivity In The Interpretation Of Analogy And Metaphor | 307 |
Index | 359 |
Contents of Recent Volumes | 369 |
Common terms and phrases
acquisition analogy anaphor Animal Behavior answer aptness associative strength attributes attributionality base and target choice cognitive Cognitive Psychology comparator hypothesis comparator stimuli conditioned inhibition confirmation bias contingency contingency theory cues cursor definitions delay display effect EMACS example excitatory Experiment Experimental Psychology format function icon inference inhibitory training Journal of Experimental Kacelnik Kamil Krebs latent inhibition learning Loftus mask matching matrix memory metaphor interpretations msec negative object descriptions older adults operant optimal foraging optimal foraging theory overshadowing patch perceptual processing performance persistence duration phase phenomenological pigeons plausibility predictions presented pretraining prey selection priming problems procedure quantitative question R. J. Herrnstein Reder reinforcement relational relationality Rescorla Rescorla-Wagner model response retrieval reward rule salience imbalance schedule scores sequence session Shettleworth similar simulations statements stereotypy stimulus duration stimulus offset structure structure-mapping subjects suggests task theory training context trials variable
Popular passages
Page 308 - Like little wanton boys that swim on bladders, This many summers in a sea of glory ; But far beyond my depth ; my high-blown pride At length broke under me ; and now has left me, Weary, and old with service, to the mercy Of a rude stream, that must for ever hide me.
Page 115 - If a card has a vowel on one side, then it has an even number on the other side.
Page 221 - Cohn, NB, Dustman, RE, & Bradford, DC (1984). Age-related decrements in Stroop color test performance. Journal of Clinical Psychology. 40, 1244-1250.
Page 46 - An ecological perspective on the study of the allocation of behavior. In ML Commons, RJ Herrnstein, & H. Rachlin (Eds.), Quantitative analyses of behavior, Vol. II: Matching and maximizing accounts. Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger, 1982.
Page 88 - Dickinson, A., & Charnock, DJ (1985). Contingency effects with maintained instrumental reinforcement. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 37B, 397-416.
Page 354 - This work was supported by the Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research, under Project THEMIS and Contract ONR-N00014-68-A-0152 to the University of Notre Dame. References 1 Krenzke, MA, and Kiernan, TJ, "Tests of Stiffened and Unstiffened Machined Spherical Shells Under External Hydrostatic Pressure," David Taylor Model Basin Report 1741, Aug.