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Fisher, Celia B. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1980
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Kindergarten Children, Memory, Review (Reexamination)
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Hock, Howard S.; Hilton, Thomas – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1979
Suggests that in tasks requiring the spatial coding of visual information children's performance depends on the degree of congruence between alternative spatial reference axes. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Elementary School Students, Visual Discrimination, Visual Stimuli
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Rice, Marine E. – Developmental Psychology, 1976
This study assessed the adequacy of Gewirtz's interpretation of vicarious reinforcement and examined the development of responsiveness to vicarious reinforcement in an experiment in which 98 children (21/2-5 years) performed a discrimination problem while being exposed to a model who was either rewarded or punished on each trial. (SB)
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Early Childhood Education, Imitation, Operant Conditioning
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Fagan, Joseph F. III – Child Development, 1976
A series of five experiments explore the 7-month-old infant's ability to discriminate among photos of faces. The infant's tendency to choose visual targets for inspection provides evidence of discrimination and recognition. (Author/JH)
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Infant Behavior, Infants, Pattern Recognition
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Stoddard, Lawrence T.; McIlvane, William J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1989
Two-year-olds discriminated two original training stimuli nearly perfectly, thereby showing that some form of controlling stimulus-response relation had been established. Most children's generalization gradients had little or no slope. Results are not consistent with earlier generalization data from young children. (RH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discrimination Learning, Generalization, Toddlers
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Werker, Janet F.; Lalonde, Chris E. – Developmental Psychology, 1988
A series of experiments indicated that by 1 year of age, infants' perceptual categories correspond to linguistically significant categories. Developmental change between 6 and 12 months shows that perceptual abilities of the 1-year-old are not arbitrary, do not reflect all the discriminatory capabilities of the infant, and are similar to phonemic…
Descriptors: Adults, Auditory Perception, Discrimination Learning, Individual Development
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Nozza, Robert J.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1991
Infants (n=34) were tested on a speech-sound discrimination-in-noise task using the visual reinforcement of infant speech discrimination procedure. An adult control group was also tested. The infant-adult difference in discrimination threshold in noise was 6.9 dB. Advantages of this adaptive threshold procedure and possible applications are noted.…
Descriptors: Auditory Evaluation, Auditory Perception, Discrimination Learning, Evaluation Methods
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Reed, Phil – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2006
The conditions under which stimulus over-selectivity occurred were studied using a matching-to-sample procedure with non-autistic adults. A matching-to-sample discrimination learning task with a number of sample-comparison retention intervals was used. The results demonstrated that an increase in retention interval increased the degree of stimulus…
Descriptors: Intervals, Discrimination Learning, Adults, Task Analysis
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Maes, J. H. R.; Vich, J.; Eling, P. A. T. M. – Brain and Cognition, 2006
Thirty-six healthy participants received a discrimination learning task requiring the identification of a relevant stimulus dimension. After successful learning, the relevant dimension was shifted unannounced. All exemplars of the two dimensions presented after the shift were novel, implying a "total change" design. In three experimental…
Descriptors: Transfer of Training, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Discrimination Learning, Responses
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Fountain, Stephen B.; Benson, Don M., Jr. – Learning and Motivation, 2006
Nonhuman animals, like humans, appear sensitive to the structure of the elements of sequences, perhaps even when the structure relates nonadjacent elements. In the present study, we examined the contribution of chunking, rule learning, and item memory when rats learned serial patterns composed of two interleaved subpatterns. In one group, the…
Descriptors: Memory, Animals, Serial Learning, Discrimination Learning
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Maes, J. H. R.; Damen, M. D. C.; Eling, P. A. T. M. – Brain and Cognition, 2004
The present experiments examined the extent to which two possible sources of error affect healthy subjects' performance in a rule-shift task. All 115 participants first received a discrimination learning task, in which a pair of different visual stimuli was presented on each trial, one of which had to be identified as "correct." Each stimulus…
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Visual Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Persistence
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Tourinho, E. Z. – Behavior Analyst, 2006
In this article, I discuss the concepts of "private stimuli," "covert responses," and "private events," emphasizing three aspects: the conditions under which private stimuli may acquire discriminative functions to verbal responses, the conditions of unobservability of covert responses, and the complexity of events or phenomena described as…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Epistemology, Responses, Problem Solving
Dib, Nancy; Sturmey, Peter – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2007
Discrete-trial teaching is an instructional method commonly used to teach social and academic skills to children with an autism spectrum disorder. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the indirect effects of discrete-trial teaching on 3 students' stereotypy. Instructions, feedback, modeling, and rehearsal were used to improve 3…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Private Schools, Autism, Check Lists
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Rabenou, Bijan; Kanak, N. Jack – American Journal of Psychology, 1975
A learning-to-learn approach was taken in the present study in an attempt to draw the subjects' attention to the associative relations among items and to examine whether the presentation of four functionally equivalent interitem lists would result in the subjects' using a higher cognitive strategy. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Psychological Studies, Research Methodology, Tables (Data)
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Gholson, Barry; O'Connor, Joseph – Child Development, 1975
Groups of second grade and college students were presented with a series of three-alternative, four-dimensional discrimination problems that contained probes for the subject's hypothesis. Subjects received either complete feedback or partial feedback. In the latter condition, when subjects were told their response choice was incorrect the correct…
Descriptors: Dimensional Preference, Discrimination Learning, Feedback, Higher Education
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