J Exp Psychol Anim Learn Cogn
October 2014
Skinner and Pavlov had innovative ways to measure both the times of their subject's responses, as well as the rate of their responses. Since then, different subfields within the study of animal behavior have prioritized either the rate or timing of responses, creating a divide in data and theory. Both timing and conditioning fields have proven fruitful, producing large bodies of empirical data and developing sophisticated models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe goal was to determine whether a signal (e.g., a click) at food availability affects timing behavior in rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe primary goal was to compare results from a free-operant procedure with pigeons [Machado, A., Guilhardi, P., 2000.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe goal was to determine whether rats time filled and empty intervals of equal duration differently. Each of five rats was trained for 50 sessions on an instrumental appetitive head entry procedure in which food was available (primed) every 120 s. On "empty" cycles, 30s prior to the next food prime, a 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe procedures for classical and operant conditioning, and for many timing procedures, involve the delivery of reinforcers that may be related to the time of previous reinforcers and responses, and to the time of onsets and terminations of stimuli. The behavior resulting from such procedures can be described as bouts of responding that occur in some pattern at some rate. A packet theory of timing and conditioning is described that accounts for such behavior under a wide range of procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF