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1.
Behav Anal ; 17(1): 2-5, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22478168
2.
Behav Anal ; 17(1): 7-23, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22478169

ABSTRACT

The relationship between basic research with nonhumans and applied behavior analysis is illustrated by our work on activity anorexia. When rats are fed one meal a day and allowed to run on an activity wheel, they run excessively, stop eating, and die of starvation. Convergent evidence, from several different research areas, indicates that the behavior of these animals and humans who self-starve is functionally similar. A biobehavioral theory of activity anorexia is presented that details the cultural contingencies, behavioral processes, and physiology of anorexia. Diagnostic criteria and a three-stage treatment program for activity-based anorexia are outlined. The animal model permits basic research on anorexia that for practical and ethical reasons cannot be conducted with humans. Thus, basic research can have applied importance.

3.
Cognition ; 37(1-2): 133-66, 1990 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2269005

ABSTRACT

This paper surveys some illustrative experiments on categorization of visual stimuli by animals other than human. The results suggest a classification of categorical powers in five steps from simple discrimination to rote and open-ended categorization, to concepts and the use of abstract relations. Nonhuman animals evidently readily categorize up to the fourth level as here defined, which is the level of concepts. With difficulty, they can sometimes be induced to rise even to the level of abstract relations. It is at the level of abstract relations that a large gap opens up between human categorizations and categorization by other animals.


Subject(s)
Attention , Cognition , Concept Formation , Mental Recall , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Animals , Columbidae , Discrimination Learning
4.
Percept Psychophys ; 46(1): 56-64, 1989 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2755762

ABSTRACT

In 49 sessions, pigeons failed to learn to sort a collection of 80 stimuli composed of a closed curve and a dot, divided into two categories, according to whether the dot was or was not inside the curve. Next, the pigeons were successfully trained, first with the insides of the curves shown in bright red, then with a darker red, and finally with a black matching the background outside the curve. After this stepwise procedure, the pigeons displayed a limited ability to sort novel curves and dot locations according to whether the dot was or was not inside the curve.


Subject(s)
Attention , Concept Formation , Discrimination Learning , Form Perception , Orientation , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Animals , Columbidae , Problem Solving
5.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 48(3): 448-53, 1987 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16812507
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 84(20): 7354-8, 1987 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3478698

ABSTRACT

Three general classes of algorithms have been proposed for figure/ground segregation. One class attempts to delineate figures by searching for edges, whereas another class attempts to grow homogeneous regions; the third class consists of hybrid algorithms, which combine both procedures in various ways. The experiment reported here demonstrated that humans use a hybrid algorithm that makes use of both kinds of processes simultaneously and interactively. This conclusion follows from the patterns of response times observed when humans tried to recognize degraded polygons. By blurring the edges, the edge-detection process was selectively impaired, and by imposing noise over the figure and background, the region-growing process was selectively impaired. By varying the amounts of both sorts of degradation independently, the interaction between the two processes was observed.


Subject(s)
Form Perception , Robotics , Adult , Algorithms , Humans , Pattern Recognition, Visual
7.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 47(1): 5-16, 1987 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16812470

ABSTRACT

Pigeons worked on concurrent variable-interval, variable-interval schedules with the alternatives signaled by slides either containing trees or not. The schedules were designed to hold both overall and relative rates of reinforcement within narrowly constrained limits, and slides were quasi-randomly ordered each day. Responding to the two alternatives was well described by the generalized matching equation with substantial undermatching. Using an adaptation of the matching law, we estimated that the subjects were correctly classifying 82% to 95% of exemplars. The matching performance transferred to new exemplars of trees and nontrees with only slight generalization decrement. The pigeons appeared to be discriminating among exemplars even when the alternatives provided equal rates of reinforcement and the average relative performances were close to 50%.

8.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 46(3): 331-51, 1986 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3805975

ABSTRACT

It has been suggested that the failure to maximize reinforcement on concurrent variable-interval, variable-ratio schedules may be misleading. Inasmuch as response costs are not directly measured, it is possible that subjects are optimally balancing the benefits of reinforcement against the costs of responding. To evaluate this hypothesis, pigeons were tested in a procedure in which interval and ratio schedules had equal response costs. On a concurrent variable time (VT), variable ratio-time (VRT) schedule, the VT schedule runs throughout the session and the VRT schedule is controlled by responses to a changeover key that switches from one schedule to the other. Reinforcement is presented independent of response. This schedule retains the essential features of concurrent VI VR, but eliminates differential response costs for the two alternatives. It therefore also eliminates at least one significant ambiguity about the reinforcement maximizing performance. Pigeons did not maximize rate of reinforcement on this procedure. Instead, their times spent on the alternative schedules matched the relative rates of reinforcement, even when schedule parameters were such that matching earned the lowest possible overall rate of reinforcement. It was further shown that the observed matching was not a procedural artifact arising from the constraints built into the schedule.


Subject(s)
Conditioning, Operant , Animal Feed , Animals , Columbidae , Female , Photic Stimulation , Reinforcement, Psychology
9.
Behav Processes ; 9(4): 345, 1984 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24924080
10.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev ; 6(1): 105-17, 1982.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7070723

ABSTRACT

Evidence from human language learning and stimulus control of learned and unlearned behavior suggests that generalization and categorization are based on principles of similarity that have evolved to favor the perception of recurrent events and extended objects. The perceptual similarities are typically more complex than, and only occasionally approximated by, physical similarity. In some, but not all, cases, perceptual similarity is tantamount to innate knowledge.


Subject(s)
Behavior , Generalization, Psychological , Perception , Animals , Behaviorism , Columbidae , Concept Formation , Conditioning, Psychological , Discrimination, Psychological , Ethology , Humans , Language Development , Speech , Visual Perception
11.
Science ; 206(4421): 921-2, 1979 Nov 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17733906
12.
J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process ; 5(2): 116-29, 1979 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-528881

ABSTRACT

Pigeons rapidly acquired a discrimination between 40 pictures containing trees and 40 not containing trees. Differential reinforcement did not affect the discriminability of individual instances of trees. Generalization to new instances of tree pictures was better than to new instances of non-tree pictures. The level of discrimination did not depend on whether trees constituted the reinforced or the unreinforced category.


Subject(s)
Discrimination Learning , Form Perception , Generalization, Stimulus , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Reversal Learning , Animals , Columbidae , Male
13.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 31(2): 209-23, 1979 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16812126

ABSTRACT

Four pigeons on concurrent variable interval, variable ratio approximated the matching relationship with biases toward the variable interval when time spent responding was the measure of behavior and toward the variable ratio when frequency of pecking was the measure of behavior. The local rates of responding were consistently higher on the variable ratio, even when there was overall preference for the variable interval. Matching on concurrent variable interval, variable ratio was shown to be incompatible with maximization of total reinforcement, given the observed local rates of responding and rates of alternation between the schedules. Furthermore, it was shown that the subjects were losing reinforcements at a rate of about 60 per hour by matching rather than maximizing.

14.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 26(2): 143-53, 1976 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16811936

ABSTRACT

Pigeons were given practice choosing between pairs of alternatives yielding different frequencies of reinforcement. Four individual alternatives were set into four pairwise choices. Averaged over subjects, the distribution of responses in each choice approximated matching. The four individual alternatives were then presented, two by two, in two pairwise choices for which there had been no initial practice. No further reinforcement was given during the tests with the new pairs. Transfer to the two test pairs deviated systematically from matching in most cases by exaggerating the preference for the alternative that had had the higher frequency of reinforcement.

15.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 24(1): 107-16, 1975 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16811858

ABSTRACT

Pigeons on concurrent variable-ratio variable-ratio schedules usually, though not always, maximize reinforcements per response. When the ratios are equal, maximization implies no particular distribution of responses to the two alternatives. When the ratios are unequal, maximization calls for exclusive preference for the smaller ratio. Responding conformed to these requirements for maximizing, which are further shown to be consistent with the conception of reinforcement implicit in the matching law governing relative responding in concurrent interval schedules.

16.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 21(3): 511-7, 1974 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4838198

ABSTRACT

Pigeons working for food on a multiple variable-interval 1-min-variable-interval 4-min schedule were subjected to variations in body weight, presumably causing changes in hunger. The proportion of responses in each component approached and eventually reached the proportion of reinforcements as body weight increased. This effect follows from the matching-law interpretation of contrast in multiple schedules.


Subject(s)
Conditioning, Operant , Feeding Behavior , Hunger , Reinforcement Schedule , Animals , Body Weight , Columbidae , Male , Satiation
17.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 21(1): 159-64, 1974 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16811728

ABSTRACT

The matching law implies that any form of behavior approaches an asymptotic frequency as its reinforcement approaches 100 per cent of the total reinforcement being obtained at a given time. This asymptote is formally independent of the kind or quantity of drive or reinforcement associated with the response in question or with any competing response.

19.
J Exp Anal Behav ; 18(3): 369-83, 1972 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4661250

ABSTRACT

Twenty-three pigeons were subjected to a series of procedures in which the key-peck's effects ranged from immediate, differential food reinforcement, through delayed reinforcement, the production of stimulus changes with and without probable secondary reinforcement, the prevention of food presentation ("food-avoidance"), to extinction. Neither primary nor secondary food reinforcement appeared to be essential for the maintenance or acquisition of key pecking. The food-avoidance contingency failed to suppress responding in any subject. Only complete extinction, when pecking produced neither food nor stimulus changes, eliminated all pecking for most subjects. A combination of stimulus-change reinforcement and food reinforcement appeared to account for the results, but only if it could be assumed that the presence of food in a procedure enhanced the reinforcing power of stimulus change, whether or not the food was also dependent upon responding. Such an interaction between reinforcers may be involved in the phenomenon of autoshaping.


Subject(s)
Avoidance Learning , Conditioning, Operant , Feeding Behavior , Hunger , Animals , Columbidae , Male , Reaction Time , Reinforcement, Psychology , Visual Perception
20.
J Psychiatr Res ; 8(3): 399-412, 1971 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4939381
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