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RELATIVE VERSUS ABSOLUTE STIMULUS CONTROL IN THE TEMPORAL BISECTION TASK
Author(s) -
Carvalho Marilia Pinheiro de,
Machado Armando
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1938-3711
pISSN - 0022-5002
DOI - 10.1901/jeab.2012.98-23
Subject(s) - stimulus (psychology) , stimulus control , absolute (philosophy) , psychology , stimulus generalization , discrimination learning , bisection , mathematics , pattern recognition (psychology) , statistics , communication , cognitive psychology , perception , neuroscience , philosophy , geometry , epistemology , nicotine
When subjects learn to associate two sample durations with two comparison keys, do they learn to associate the keys with the short and long samples (relational hypothesis), or with the specific sample durations (absolute hypothesis)? We exposed 16 pigeons to an ABA design in which phases A and B corresponded to tasks using samples of 1 s and 4 s, or 4 s and 16 s. Across phases, we varied the mapping between the samples and the keys. For group Relative, short and long samples were always associated with the same keys (e.g., Phase A: ‘1s→ Left, 4s→ Right’; Phase B: ‘4s→ Left, 16s→ Right’); for group Absolute, the 4‐s sample was associated always with the same key (e.g., Phase A: ‘1s→ Left, 4s→ Right’; Phase B: ‘16s→ Left, 4s→ Right’). If temporal control is relational, group Relative should learn the new task faster than group Absolute, but if temporal control is absolute, the opposite should occur. We compared the results with the predictions of the Learning‐to‐Time (LeT) model, which accounts for temporal discrimination in terms of absolute stimulus control and stimulus generalization. The acquisition curves of the two groups were generally consistent with LeT and therefore more consistent with the absolute than the relative hypothesis.