Pigeons’ memory for event duration: Differences between visual and auditory signals
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Individual Differences in Visual and Auditory Memory^
Two groups were given visual and auditory forma of a digit memory test in a counterbalanced order (auditory-visual group and visualauditory group) under conditions of immediate and 10-second delayed recall. Two control groups were given exclusively either the visual or auditory test. Auditory memory was better than visual for immediate recall; the reverse was true for delayed recall, the intera...
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An intrairial proactive interference design was used to examine the nature of pigeons' memory for duration in a delayed matching task. Short (2 s) or long (10 s) target samples were preceded on test trials by a short or long presample. The durations were consistent on some trials (shortshort or long-long) and inconsistent on others (short-long or long-short). Contrary to predictions based on pr...
متن کاملWhen do auditory/visual differences in duration judgements occur?
Four experiments examined judgements of the duration of auditory and visual stimuli. Two used a bisection method, and two used verbal estimation. Auditory/visual differences were found when durations of auditory and visual stimuli were explicitly compared and when durations from both modalities were mixed in partition bisection. Differences in verbal estimation were also found both when people ...
متن کاملProcedural Determinants of Coding Processes in Pigeons' Memory for Duration
Pigeon’s retention functions for duration samples differ qualitatively in choice and successive delayed-matching-to-sample tasks. This research tested procedures designed to be hybrids of these tasks. In Experiment 1, adding a fixed-interval component to the test phase of the choice procedure did not eliminate the ‘‘respond-short’’ effect that is characteristic of retention functions for durati...
متن کاملDivided attention between simultaneous auditory and visual signals.
Past studies of simultaneous attention to pairs of visual stimuli have used the "dual-task" paradigm to show that identification of the direction of a change in luminance, whether incremental or decremental, is "capacity-limited," while simple detection of these changes is governed by "capacity-free" processes. On the basis of that finding, it has been suggested that the contrast between identi...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Animal Learning & Behavior
سال: 1998
ISSN: 0090-4996,1532-5830
DOI: 10.3758/bf03199209