Tatiane Labliuk | Universidade Federal do ABC (original) (raw)
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Papers by Tatiane Labliuk
International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 2015
Author(s): Labliuk, Tatiane Panzarini; Guilhardi, Paulo; Cravo, Andre Mascioli; Church, Russell M... more Author(s): Labliuk, Tatiane Panzarini; Guilhardi, Paulo; Cravo, Andre Mascioli; Church, Russell M; Caetano, Marcelo Salvador | Abstract: Humans and rats can discriminate different fixed intervals (FIs) that are signaled by different stimuli. With only a few pairings of stimuli with intervals, temporal performance becomes a function of the stimuli, with responding increasing earlier for stimuli that signal shorter FIs compared to stimuli that signal longer FIs. As predicted by timing and conditioning models, the amount of training with the different stimuli and intervals determines the development of such stimulus control. This study reviews some earlier work from our group suggesting that the amount of training is necessary, but not sufficient, to account for the development of stimulus-controlled performance. Moreover, it describes an experiment in which participants were trained in a computerized shooting task with three FIs (target speeds) signaled by three stimuli (different bac...
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International Journal of Comparative Psychology, 2015
Author(s): Labliuk, Tatiane Panzarini; Guilhardi, Paulo; Cravo, Andre Mascioli; Church, Russell M... more Author(s): Labliuk, Tatiane Panzarini; Guilhardi, Paulo; Cravo, Andre Mascioli; Church, Russell M; Caetano, Marcelo Salvador | Abstract: Humans and rats can discriminate different fixed intervals (FIs) that are signaled by different stimuli. With only a few pairings of stimuli with intervals, temporal performance becomes a function of the stimuli, with responding increasing earlier for stimuli that signal shorter FIs compared to stimuli that signal longer FIs. As predicted by timing and conditioning models, the amount of training with the different stimuli and intervals determines the development of such stimulus control. This study reviews some earlier work from our group suggesting that the amount of training is necessary, but not sufficient, to account for the development of stimulus-controlled performance. Moreover, it describes an experiment in which participants were trained in a computerized shooting task with three FIs (target speeds) signaled by three stimuli (different bac...
eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishing services to the University of California ... more eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishing services to the University of California and delivers a dynamic research platform to scholars worldwide.