Cognitive Aspects of Stimulus Control

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animal categorization
animal imagery studies
Anthony A. Wright
B. Carey Rakitin
Benjamin Rusak
Cache Sites
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Central Place Foraging
Clark's Nutcrackers
cognitive processes
Comparison Stimuli
D. Alan Stubbs
David F. Sherry
David Macewen
Donald F. Kendrick
Donald M. Wilkie
Donald S. Blough
Duration Pairs
Duration Ratio
E. J. Capaldi
Edward A. Wasserman
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Global Cues
Gordon B. Schacter
Hank Davis
Hippocampal Complex
hippocampal function
Human Visual Search
J. Gregor Fetterman
Julie J. Neiworth
Ken Cheng
Laurene Ratcliff
Leon R. Dreyfus
Marcia L. Spetch
Maria T. Phelps
Mark Rilling
Nancy L. Dallal
Numerical Competence
numerosity discrimination
pattern perception
Pitch Classes
Pitch Interval
Radial Arm Maze
Radial Arm Maze Performance
Radial Maze
Ramesh S. Bhatt
Reference Memory
Relative Numerosity
Robert G. Cook
Robert J. Willson
Ron Weisman
Sarah T. Boysen
Search Asymmetry
spatial cognition
spatial cognition research
spatial memory problem solving
spatial tracking
Stimulus Control
Suzanne E. Macdonald
Ti
Transfer Tests
Transfer Trials
Warren H. Meck
White Throated Sparrows
William A. Roberts
Working Memory
Working Memory Errors

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805809831
  • Weight: 1000g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 1992
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The study of discrimination and generalization in animals traditionally involves stimuli that are simple, uniform, and restricted in time or space. In recent years, the area of stimulus control has been expanded with the use of stimuli that are complex, extended in time or space, and incorporate or represent natural objects, events, or locations. The contributors to this unique volume have emphasized controlling functions of complex stimulus events -- such as location or duration -- and their relation to cognitive processes in animals. The chapters cover a wide array of topics, including spatial cognition, categorization, pattern perception, numerosity discriminations, imagery, and spatial tracking, thereby addressing the question of how complex events are perceived, processed, and organized. This volume goes beyond other recent books on animal cognition in that it specifically places some well-known phenomena within the context of stimulus control.

W. K. Honig, J. Gregor Fetterman, Werner K. Honig