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Food-associated conditioning in the smoothhound shark Mustelus mustelus (Linnaeus, 1758)Louw, Erika 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--Stellenbosch University, 2001. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Smoothhound sharks Mustelus mustelus (Chondrichthyes: Triakidae) were
conditioned to associate a compound auditory and electrical conditioned stimulus (CS)
using the presentation of food as the unconditioned stimulus (US). This was done to
investigate the general conditioning process of sharks, specifically the use of conditioned
stimuli, the time frame required for conditioning, the retention of conditioned responses
and the individual learning capabilities of sharks in classical conditioning experiments.
Conditioning was done in two CS experiment replicates, in which the CS and the US
were paired to elicit a conditioned response (CR: entering of a feeding area). Shark
behaviour in these replicates was compared with those of sharks in a CS control. In the
CS control, the CS and US were not paired; consequently no CS-US association was
formed. In contrast, half of the sharks in the 1st and 2nd CS replicates formed the
conditioned CS-US association after five and six days of conditioning training,
respectively. This conditioned association was also retained over a two-month rest
period. However the rate of conditioning of sharks varied, which was thought to be due
to differences in motivational drives, particularly hunger. These experiments
demonstrated that classical conditioning could provide a mechanism whereby
smooth hound sharks can adapt to utilise new food sources.
However these experiments could not demonstrate whether auditory or electrical
cues are more biological relevant signallers of the presence of food for smooth hound
sharks. According to the "belonging ness" phenomenon, for conditioning to be
successful, the CS should be biologically relevant to the US. Therefore by comparisons
of the conditioning success with different conditioned stimuli, the biological relevance of each CS can be determined. To determine the biological relevance of each component
of the compound CS, an auditory or electrical CS was paired with the presentation of
food (US), in separate experiments. The conditioned CS-US association formed in the
majority of the sharks after 60 and 57 conditioning trials in the auditory CS and electrical
CS experiment, respectively. This suggests that both auditory and electrical cues are
biologically relevant signallers of food, facilitating the oppurtunistic feeding behaviour of
smoothhound sharks. However, after five days of conditioning, conditioning with the
electrical CS had proceeded further and the electrical CS-US association was stronger
than the auditory CS-US association. This indicates that electrical cues are more
biologically relevant due to past feeding experiences. Thus, classical conditioning during
past feeding experiences can influence the feeding behaviour of smooth hound sharks. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Gladde-hondhaaie Muste/us muste/us (Chondrichthyes: Triakidae) is gekonditioneer
om "n gekombineerde klank en elektriese konditionerings stimulus (CS) met voedsel, die
ongekonditioneerde stimulus (US) te assosieer. Dit is gedoen om die konditionerings
proses, spesifiek die gebruik van konditionerings stimuli, tyd benodig vir konditionering,
behoud van die gekonditioneerde gedrag en individuele leer-vermoëens van haaie in
klassieke konditionerings eksperimente te ondersoek. Konditionering is gedoen in twee
CS eksperiment replikate, waarin die CS en die US saam aangebied is, om "n
konditionerings reaksie (CR: om in 'n voedings area in te beweeg) teweeg te bring. Die
gedrag van haaie in die CS replikate is vergelyk met die van haaie in "n CS kontrole. In
die CS kontrole is die CS en die US nie saam aangebied nie en gevolglik is geen
gekonditioneerde CS-US assosiasie gevorm nie. Daarenteen is die CS-US assosiasie
by die helfte van die haaie in die 1st en 2de CS replikate gevorm, na vyf en ses dae,
onderskeidelik. Hierdie gekonditioneerde CS-US assosiasie het selfs behoue gebly na 'n
twee maande rus periode. Die tempo van konditionering het egter verskil, moontlik
a. g. v. motiverings verskille, veral hongerte. Hierdie eksperimente het gedemonstreer
dat klassieke konditionering kan dien as 'n meganisme waarmee gladde-hondhaaie kan
aanpas om nuwe voedsel bronne te benut.
Hierdie eksperimente kon egter nie demonstreer óf klank stimuli óf elektriese stimuli
meer biologiese relevante seine van die teenwoordighied van voesel is vir gladdehondhaaie
nie. Volgens die "belonging ness" verskynsel, moet die CS biologies relevant
to die US wees, vir konditionering om suksesvol te wees. Dus kan die biologiese relevansie van verskillende konditionerings stimuli bepaal word deur die konditionerings
sukses van elke CS te vegelyk. Om die meer biologiese relevante komponent van die
gekombineerde CS te bepaal, is 'n klank of elektriese CS saam met voedsel aangebied
in aparte eksperimente. Die gekonditioneerse CS-US assosiasie is gevorm by die
meeste van die haaie na 60 en 57 konditionerings proeflopies in die klank en elektriese
CS eksperimente, onderskeidelik. Hierdie resultate dui daarop dat beide klank en
elektriese stimuli biologies relevante siene van voedsel is, wat die oppurtunistiese
voedings wyse van gladde-hondhaaie fasiliteer. Konditionering met die elektriese CS het
egter verder gevorder en die elektriese CS-US assosiasie was sterker as die klank CSUS
assosiasie na vyf dae van konditionering. Dus, mag elektriese stimuli meer biologies
relevant wees weens vorige voedings ervaringe. Dit illustreer dat klasseke konditionering
tydens vorige voedings ervaringe die voedings gedrag van gladde-hondhaaie kan
beinvloed.
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Effects of response bias on learning and memory tasks in squirrel monkeysScott, Anne G. (Anne Grete), 1949- January 1987 (has links)
Six squirrel monkeys were tested on short-term memory tasks assessing ability to suppress perseverative responses that had been previously reinforced. Each trial was divided into three parts: Initial Preference Assay (IPA), Bias-Conditioning (BC), and Reversal Conditioning (RC), and alternated between two conditions: experimental and control. Strength of response bias (based on choices of response during IPA) exceeded chance levels for each monkey. Eighty-four percent of responses to BC of the experimental trials were made to the response loci chosen in IPA even though that response was not rewarded. Monkeys made 38% correct responses during RC but shifted from making most errors during control trials in the beginning of the experiment to making most errors during experimental trials by the end of the experiment. Monkeys had developed a strategy of persevering from IPA to BC and then shifting to the other, not previously chosen window on RC, which led to correct responses in the experimental trials. (Abstract shortened with permission of author.)
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Second-Order Conditional Control of Members of an Equivalence ClassCammilleri, Anthony Peter 08 1900 (has links)
The conditional control of equivalence has received much attention in the analysis of verbal behavior. While previous research identified conditional control of relational responding and conditional control of equivalence class formation, this study investigated the possibility of conditional control of members of an equivalence class. Following baseline conditional discrimination training and equivalence testing, subjects were taught to select a particular member in the presence of a Green background screen and another member in the presence of a Red background screen.
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The Role of Contingent-Anxious Versus Temporally Yoked Conditioned Stimulus Termination in the Enhancement or Conservation of Learned FearDial, Miles H. 12 1900 (has links)
This study investigated whether contingent-anxious conditioned stimulus termination was more important than temporally yoked termination in producing conservation or enhancement of learned fear. Thirty psychology students, twenty-six females and four males, were administered item thirty-nine from the Fear Survey Schedule and an avoidance test. After in vivo treatment exposure to a harmless snake, post-test measures identical to pretests revealed that contingent-anxious subjects retained significantly more fear (p <.05) on both indexes than temporally yoked subjects. No enhancement was found and only on the subjective measure did contingent-anxious subjects show fear conservation when contrasted with no-treatment controls (p >.05). Implications for "implosive" therapies were discussed.
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The Effects of Extinction on Human Performance Following Exposure to Fixed Ratio Schedules of ReinforcementAnderson, Richard L. 05 1900 (has links)
This experiment examined the effects of extinction on rate of responding and several topographical and temporal measures in adult humans. Three college students were trained to type the sequence 1•5•3 on a numeric keypad on a computer. The subjects were exposed to different fixed-ratio schedules of reinforcement (FR1, FR 5, and FR10 respectively) and extinction. Subjects displayed typical schedule performances during the maintenance phase of the experiment. During extinction the performances were disrupted, they showed a "break and run" pattern and a general decrease in responding. Also, new topographical and temporal patterns emerged. These data are consistent with those reported for non-human species and special human populations.
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Latent inhibition and habituation during sensory preconditioningMercier, Pierre January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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Role of the basolateral amygdala in learning and relearning context conditioned fear and its extinction.Laurent, Vincent, Psychology, Faculty of Science, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
The basolateral complex of the amygdala (BLA) is a key component of the neuronal circuitry underlying the acquisition and the extinction of Pavlovian conditioned fear. The present series of experiments examined the role of neuronal activity and NMDA receptors (NMDAr) activation in the BLA on learning and relearning context conditioned fear and its extinction. Disruption of neuronal activity in the BLA prevented the acquisition of fear responses to a novel, a moderately familiar or a highly familiar context. It also prevented the reacquisition of fear responses to a conditioned or an extinguished context. Local blockade of NMDAr containing the NR2B subunit prior to training extinction or re-extinction impaired the short- and long-term loss of fear responses. In contrast, a similar blockade subsequent to training extinction or re-extinction left the long-term loss of fear responses unaffected. Disruption of neuronal activity in the BLA prior to training extinction and re-extinction depressed fear responses. It impaired the long-term loss of fear produced by extinction training but spared and even facilitated the long-loss of fear produced by re-extinction training when extinction had already been learned. The exact same outcome was observed when neuronal activity in the BLA was disrupted subsequent to training extinction and re-extinction. These findings suggest that the BLA is critical for both learning and relearning context conditioned fear. In contrast, the BLA is necessary for learning but not relearning extinction of conditioned fear. This implies that once extinction has been learned, others structures support the retrieval and the expression of extinction memory. This is consistent with current neural model of extinction that involves interactions between several neural substrates including the BLA and the medial prefrontal cortex.
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CS-US temporal relations in blockingAmundson, Jeffrey C. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Psychology, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Acoustically evoked potentials in the rat during conditioningJanuary 1966 (has links)
[by] Robert D. Hall and Roger Greenwood Mark. / Bibliography: p.80-83. / Contract no. DA36-039-AMC-03200(E).
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Elucidating the fear : maintaining properties of the ventral tegmental area : a thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for degree of Master of Science in Psychology at the University of Canterbury /Taylor, Amanda. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--University of Canterbury, 2008. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 76-93). Also available via the World Wide Web.
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