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Nonkes, Lourens J. P.; van de Vondervoort, Ilse I. G. M.; de Leeuw, Mark J. C.; Wijlaars, Linda P.; Maes, Joseph H. R.; Homberg, Judith R. – Learning & Memory, 2012
Behavioral flexibility is a cognitive process depending on prefrontal areas allowing adaptive responses to environmental changes. Serotonin transporter knockout (5-HTT[superscript -/-]) rodents show improved reversal learning in addition to orbitofrontal cortex changes. Another form of behavioral flexibility, extradimensional strategy set-shifting…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Animals
Berg, Mark E.; Grace, Randolph C. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2011
Six pigeons responded in a visual category learning task in which the stimuli were dimensionally separable Gabor patches that varied in frequency and orientation. We compared performance in two conditions which varied in terms of whether accurate performance required that responding be controlled jointly by frequency and orientation, or…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Classification, Reinforcement, Animals
White, K. Geoffrey; Brown, Glenn S. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2011
Forgetting functions were generated for pigeons in a delayed matching-to-sample task, in which accuracy decreased with increasing retention-interval duration. In baseline training with dark retention intervals, accuracy was high overall. Illumination of the experimental chamber by a houselight during the retention interval impaired performance…
Descriptors: Intervals, Retention (Psychology), Animals, Task Analysis
Santi, Angelo; Hoover, Claire; Simmons, Sabrina – Learning and Motivation, 2011
Rats were trained in a duration-comparison task to press one lever if the comparison duration ("c") was 1.2-s shorter than a standard duration ("s"), and another lever if c was 1.2-s longer than s. The interval between s and c duration was 1 s. The 10 duration pairs used during training controlled for the absolute duration of "c" and the total…
Descriptors: Intervals, Children, Animals, Task Analysis
Redford, Joshua S. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Metacognition research has focused on the degree to which nonhuman primates share humans' capacity to monitor their cognitive processes. Convincing evidence now exists that monkeys can engage in metacognitive monitoring. By contrast, few studies have explored metacognitive control in monkeys, and the available evidence of metacognitive control…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Classification, Animals, Task Analysis
Lee, Inah; Kim, Jangjin – Learning & Memory, 2010
Hippocampal-dependent tasks often involve specific associations among stimuli (including egocentric information), and such tasks are therefore prone to interference from irrelevant task strategies before a correct strategy is found. Using an object-place paired-associate task, we investigated changes in neural firing patterns in the hippocampus in…
Descriptors: Animals, Infants, Brain, Task Analysis
Canal, Clinton E.; Stutz, Sonja J.; Gold, Paul E. – Learning & Memory, 2005
The present experiments examined the effects of injecting glucose into the dorsal hippocampus or dorsolateral striatum on learning rates and on strategy selection in rats trained on a T-maze that can be solved by using either a hippocampus-sensitive place or striatum-sensitive response strategy. Percentage strategy selection on a probe trial…
Descriptors: Animals, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Brain, Biochemistry