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The effect of stop consonant-vowel duration on dichotically presented temporal order judgment (speech)January 1984 (has links)
Seven subjects participated in a dichotic listening task and judged in which ear the leading stimulus was presented. The stimuli consisted of six speaker-produced stop consonant-vowels, /ba/, /da/, /ga/, /pa/, /ta/, and /ka/ which were digitally edited to durations of 40, 60, 90, and 180 msec. The experiment was blocked by stimulus duration. At each condition of duration, listeners judged the temporal order of stimuli separated by 4, 8, 16, 32, or 64 msec asynchrony. There were significant main effects of both asynchrony and stimulus duration. Sensitivity increased with longer asynchronies and also for longer durations. Thresholds, between 16 and 32 msec asynchrony, approximated those reported by others. A further comparison of intensity levels, 66 dB SPL and 100 dB SPL, for the 40 msec duration condition proved non-significant. The results are compared to earlier investigations which reported increases in sensitivity for shorter duration stimuli, but which, in all cases, employed monotonically presented sinusoids. The results of the present study suggest that stimulus duration affects temporal order judgment at central as well as peripheral levels of processing / acase@tulane.edu
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The effect of work, rest intervals, and rate of work elicitation upon reactive inhibitionJanuary 1961 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Effects of instructions to forget on negative transfer in paired-associate learningJanuary 1972 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Effects of neonatal gonadectomy and ovarian implantation on female sexual behaviors in male and female ratsJanuary 1969 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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The effects of neonatal androgen and duration of ovarian tenancy on reproductive behavior and physiology of the adult female ratJanuary 1970 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Effect of puberal estrogen and anti-estrogen on ovarian function and sexual behavior in the neonatally androgenized female ratJanuary 1969 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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The effects of illumination on the behavior of a nocturnal prosimian, Galago crassicaudatusJanuary 1967 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Effects of repeated shifts on positive and negative contrast in consummatory behavior in deprived and non-deprived rats (behavioral contrast)January 1986 (has links)
The effects of deprivation and repeated shifts on positive and negative contrast effects in the albino rat were investigated. Six groups, formed by a factorial combination of two deprivation levels (deprived or non-deprived) and three concentration conditions (4%, 32%, or alternating 32% and 4% every two days), were used. Fifty-seven subjects were given daily five-minute exposures to a 32% or 4% sucrose solution. Experimental alternation groups received a total of five upshifts to the 32% solution and five downshifts to the 4% solution. Control groups received only the 32% or 4% solution, respectively, throughout the 22 day test period. Negative contrast was repeatedly obtained, with both deprived and non-deprived alternating subjects lower than the 4% control subjects on dependent measures of lick rate and time spent at the drinking tube. Recovery was noted in deprived subjects on the second day of each downshift; non-deprived subjects displayed a negative contrast effect which endured across both days. Positive contrast was apparent, with deprived alternating subjects scoring above 32% control subjects in the first shift only. Non-deprived subjects did not exhibit positive contrast, but rather displayed means below that of the non-deprived control groups. The negative contrast results indicated that deprivation level yielded differences in contrast effects, due possibly to subjects in different deprivation conditions responding to different aspects of the same solution. Positive contrast results indicated that a 'ceiling effect' may limit the possibility of demonstrating positive contrast for deprived subjects. The results were discussed in terms of a perceptual/emotional model, which suggests that the mechanisms responsible for contrast change over time / acase@tulane.edu
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Electroencephalographic correlates of ovulation-inducing luteinizing hormone release and vaginal stimulation in female albino ratsJanuary 1968 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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Encoding processes affecting the verbatim and gist retention of sentencesJanuary 1979 (has links)
acase@tulane.edu
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