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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

The ability to generate or inhibit responses after frontal lobectomy /

Miller, Laurie Ann January 1987 (has links)
The ability to generate different responses, and the ability to inhibit inappropriate behaviour, were explored in patients with unilateral cerebral excisions. Site-of-lesion effects were found to interact with the sex of the subject, the time of test-administration, and the nature of the response criteria. In Part I, the Thurstone Word Fluency Test revealed impairments two weeks postoperatively in patients with frontal, temporal, or central-area lesions. In men, removals from the left cerebral hemisphere caused greater deficits than removals from the right, but only left central-area excisions resulted in long-lasting impairments. Patients with left frontal-lobe removals produced few words on a sentence-completion fluency task, but on visual-image fluency, no patient-group was impaired. In Part II, an inability to inhibit impulsive actions on risk-taking tasks was seen after frontal lobectomy, as was a tendency to disregard the instructions on a word-fluency task. These results are consistent with the fact that patients with frontal-lobe lesions described themselves on a behavioural-trait questionnaire as less flexible and more impulsive than did control subjects.
12

Conditional discrimination acquisition in young children : are the facilitative of naming due to stimulus discrimination? /

Stull, Anne K. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of North Carolina Wilmington, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves: 129-131)
13

Stimulus generalization and matching in concurrent variable interval schedules

Larsson, Eric V January 2011 (has links)
Photocopy of typescript. / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
14

A comparison of omission training with constant or changing reinforcers vs. extinction:response reduction and recovery

Vatterott, Madeleine Kay. January 1984 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1984 V37 / Master of Science
15

The Effects of Interresponse Intervals on Behavioral Variability in Humans

Reilly, Mark P. (Mark Peter) 12 1900 (has links)
The present experiment studied the relationship between interresponse intervals and behavioral variability. Subjects emitted sequences of 4 keypresses on two keys on a variability schedule that delivered points when the current 4-response sequence differed from the previous 5 sequences. Three experimental conditions were studied; no interresponse interval, 4-s interresponse interval and 8-s interresponse interval. Interresponse intervals followed each of the first three responses in each sequence. Two groups were used to study initial training histories. Group 1 was first exposed to the no-interresponse interval condition. Group 2 was first exposed to the 4-s interresponse interval condition. Subjects were then exposed to the different interresponse interval conditions. There was little change in variability across conditions. However, the variability observed in the subjects first exposed to the 4-s interresponse interval was greater than the variability observed in subjects first exposed to no-interresponse interval. There was higher-order response patterning in both groups, but it was more pronounced in the no-interresponse interval group.
16

Disruption of conditional discrimination and its effects on equivalence /

Guerrero, Luis Fernando. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Nevada, Reno, 2005. / "May 2005." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 64-72). Online version available on the World Wide Web. Library also has microfilm. Ann Arbor, Mich. : ProQuest Information and Learning Company, [2005]. 1 microfilm reel ; 35 mm.
17

Redefining early child neglect subthreshold pathways to non-optimal development /

Akai, Carol Elizabeth. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Notre Dame, 2007. / Thesis directed by John G. Borkowski for the Department of Psychology. "August 2007." Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-86).
18

Effects of aging on face perception: Exploring efficiency, noise & orientation

Creighton, Sarah E January 2021 (has links)
Face perception is impaired in a variety of ways in older adults, but the mechanisms underlying these changes remain unclear. A central theme of this dissertation is that task performance is constrained by two factors intrinsic to the observer: sources of random variability -- internal noise -- and the efficiency with which task-relevant stimulus information is utilized. This thesis uses several behavioural, psychophysical methods to examine how age-related changes in one or both of these factors affect face processing. Chapter 2 used the classification image (CI) method to characterize the spatial sampling patterns of younger and older observers performing a face discrimination task. Compared to younger adults, older adults used information in the eye/brow region less consistently and instead relied on relatively less informative regions such as the forehead. The differences in CIs accounted for the lower absolute efficiency that was found in older observers. Chapter 3 estimated internal noise and calculation efficiency by measuring threshold-vs.-noise (TvN) curves and response consistency in a face discrimination task. Compared to younger observers, older observers had higher additive internal noise and lower calculation efficiency, but the magnitude of multiplicative internal noise did not differ between age groups. Previous studies have shown that younger adults have a bias to rely on horizontal structure to discriminate and identify faces, and the magnitude of this so-called horizontal bias is correlated with identification accuracy. The experiments in Chapter 4 measured horizontal bias in younger and older adults, and found that age differences in horizontal bias account for some, but not all, of the age difference in face identification accuracy. In summary, my work demonstrates that additive (but not multiplicative) internal noise is greater in older adults, and that they are less efficient at sampling information that is conveyed by structure at different locations and orientations in a face. / Dissertation / Doctor of Science (PhD) / Our experience of the visual environment results from perceptual processes in the brain. Many of these processes change with age, such as our ability to identify someone from a photograph of their face. Performance is influenced by both random variability, or "noise", within the observer and how efficiently we use task-relevant information in the visual environment. By systematically manipulating the amount of available stimulus information I assessed the contribution of these factors to older adults' judgements of facial identity, and characterized the information on which these decisions are based. These experiments are the first to consider how face perception in older adults is constrained by the combined effects of internal noise and the efficiency with which the visual system utilizes various sources of information. The results provide a number of directions for future research in the fields of face perception and age-related changes in complex pattern vision.
19

Long-term impacts of prenatal synthetic glucocorticoids exposure on functional brain correlates of cognitive monitoring in adolescence

Ilg, Liesa, Klados, Manousos, Alexander, Nina, Kirschbaum, Clemens, Li, Shu-Chen 12 June 2018 (has links) (PDF)
The fetus is highly responsive to the level of glucocorticoids in the gestational environment. Perturbing glucocorticoids during fetal development could yield long-term consequences. Extending prior research about effects of prenatally exposed synthetic glucocorticoids (sGC) on brain structural development during childhood, we investigated functional brain correlates of cognitive conflict monitoring in term-born adolescents, who were prenatally exposed to sGC. Relative to the comparison group, behavioral response consistency (indexed by lower reaction time variability) and a brain correlate of conflict monitoring (the N2 event-related potential) were reduced in the sGC exposed group. Relatedly, source localization analyses showed that activations in the fronto-parietal network, most notably in the cingulate cortex and precuneus, were also attenuated in these adolescents. These regions are known to subserve conflict detection and response inhibition as well as top-down regulation of stress responses. Moreover, source activation in the anterior cingulate cortex correlated negatively with reaction time variability, whereas activation in the precuneus correlated positively with salivary cortisol reactivity to social stress in the sGC exposed group. Taken together, findings of this study indicate that prenatal exposure to sGC yields lasting impacts on the development of fronto-parietal brain functions during adolescence, affecting multiple facets of adaptive cognitive and behavioral control.
20

Long-term impacts of prenatal synthetic glucocorticoids exposure on functional brain correlates of cognitive monitoring in adolescence

Ilg, Liesa, Klados, Manousos, Alexander, Nina, Kirschbaum, Clemens, Li, Shu-Chen 12 June 2018 (has links)
The fetus is highly responsive to the level of glucocorticoids in the gestational environment. Perturbing glucocorticoids during fetal development could yield long-term consequences. Extending prior research about effects of prenatally exposed synthetic glucocorticoids (sGC) on brain structural development during childhood, we investigated functional brain correlates of cognitive conflict monitoring in term-born adolescents, who were prenatally exposed to sGC. Relative to the comparison group, behavioral response consistency (indexed by lower reaction time variability) and a brain correlate of conflict monitoring (the N2 event-related potential) were reduced in the sGC exposed group. Relatedly, source localization analyses showed that activations in the fronto-parietal network, most notably in the cingulate cortex and precuneus, were also attenuated in these adolescents. These regions are known to subserve conflict detection and response inhibition as well as top-down regulation of stress responses. Moreover, source activation in the anterior cingulate cortex correlated negatively with reaction time variability, whereas activation in the precuneus correlated positively with salivary cortisol reactivity to social stress in the sGC exposed group. Taken together, findings of this study indicate that prenatal exposure to sGC yields lasting impacts on the development of fronto-parietal brain functions during adolescence, affecting multiple facets of adaptive cognitive and behavioral control.

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