نتایج جستجو برای: discrimination

تعداد نتایج: 64955  

Journal: :Psychonomic bulletin & review 2008
Daniel I Brooks Edward A Wasserman

Same/different discrimination is a classic task for investigating relational learning in animals. Recent research suggests that pigeons can learn a trial-unique same/different discrimination, which eliminates the opportunity to memorize the training items (Brooks & Wasserman, 2008). The authors conducted three tests to elucidate the role that item-based comparison plays in this trial-unique dis...

Journal: :Neuron 2004
Richard T Born

In this issue of Neuron, Uka and DeAngelis report a neural signature of the strategy that monkeys' brains developed to solve a visual discrimination task by training them on one version of the task and testing them on another. Extensive training on one version caused decision networks in the animals' brains to ignore certain classes of neurons whose signals would have been useful on the modifie...

Journal: :Attention, perception & psychophysics 2014
Antonia Fumarola Valter Prpic Osvaldo Da Pos Mauro Murgia Carlo Umiltà Tiziano Agostini

In the present study, we investigated whether luminance and the side of response execution are associated, showing a SNARC-like effect (faster responses with the left hand for dark stimuli, and vice versa for light stimuli). A total of 30 participants were tested in two experiments. In Experiment 1, the association between space and the luminance of chromatic stimuli was directly tested (bright...

Journal: :Cognitive neuropsychology 2003
Isabel Gauthier Thomas W James Kim M Curby Michael J Tarr

Does conceptual knowledge about objects influence their perceptual processing? There is some evidence for interactions between semantic and visual knowledge in tasks requiring both long-term memory and lexical access. Here we assessed whether similar perceptual/semantic interactions arise during sequential visual matching, a task that does not require access to semantic information. Matching of...

2017
Diego A Gutnisky Charles Beaman Sergio E Lew Valentin Dragoi

Brain activity during wakefulness is characterized by rapid fluctuations in neuronal responses. Whether these fluctuations play any role in modulating the accuracy of behavioral responses is poorly understood. Here, we investigated whether and how trial changes in the population response impact sensory coding in monkey V1 and perceptual performance. Although the responses of individual neurons ...

Journal: :The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2009
Diana Deutsch Kevin Dooley Trevor Henthorn Brian Head

Absolute pitch (AP), the ability to name a musical note in the absence of a reference note, is extremely rare in the U.S. and Europe, and its genesis is unclear. The prevalence of AP was examined among students in an American music conservatory as a function of age of onset of musical training, ethnicity, and fluency in speaking a tone language. Taking those of East Asian ethnicity, the perform...

Journal: :The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2002
John H Grose Joseph W Hall Emily Buss

This experiment examined the generation of virtual pitch for harmonically related tones that do not overlap in time. The interval between successive tones was systematically varied in order to gauge the integration period for virtual pitch. A pitch discrimination task was employed, and both harmonic and nonharmonic tone series were tested. The results confirmed that a virtual pitch can be gener...

Journal: :Vision Research 2005
Lili Tcheang Stuart J. Gilson Andrew Glennerster

Using an immersive virtual reality system, we measured the ability of observers to detect the rotation of an object when its movement was yoked to the observer's own translation. Most subjects had a large bias such that a static object appeared to rotate away from them as they moved. Thresholds for detecting target rotation were similar to those for an equivalent speed discrimination task carri...

Journal: :Developmental science 2005
Fei Xu Elizabeth S Spelke Sydney Goddard

Four experiments used a preferential looking method to investigate 6-month-old infants' capacity to represent numerosity in visual-spatial displays. Building on previous findings that such infants discriminate between arrays of eight versus 16 discs, but not eight versus 12 discs (Xu & Spelke, 2000), Experiments 1 and 2 investigated whether infants' numerosity discrimination depends on the rati...

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