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Maier, Steven F. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 1977
In his comment, Black (AA 526 155) argued that Maier and Seligman (EJ 138 911) incorrectly interpreted competing motor response explanations of the learned helplessness effect. Here, it is argued that no article that has proposed a competing motor response explanation of the learned helplessness effect has alluded to a mechanism similar to the one…
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Critical Thinking, Experimental Psychology, Hypothesis Testing
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Fleming, Alison S. – New Directions for Child Development, 1989
Links infrahuman and human research in an examination of sensory and experiential factors that regulate early mothering behavior. (PCB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Animal Behavior, Animals, Experience
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Welch, J. Edward, Jr. – Science and Children, 1994
Presents an overview of an interdisciplinary animal behavior unit on wolves, including aspects of science, social studies, and language arts. Includes sources of wolf information. (MKR)
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Animals, Elementary Education, Learning Activities
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Stott, D. H. – Focus, 1994
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Cultural Influences, Environmental Education, Overpopulation
Prock, Marsha – Communication: Journalism Education Today, 2000
Discusses parallels between the initial training of young horses and the training of beginning journalists. Looks at the importance of time and energy, patience and discipline in achieving success with both. (SR)
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Horses, Journalism Education, Secondary Education
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Ward, Ryan D.; Bailey, Ericka M.; Odum, Amy L. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2006
This experiment assessed the effects of "d"-Amphetamine and ethanol on reinforced variable and repetitive key-peck sequences in pigeons. Pigeons responded on two keys under a multiple schedule of Repeat and Vary components. In the Repeat component, completion of a target sequence of right, right, left, left resulted in food. In the Vary component,…
Descriptors: Animals, Control Groups, Drug Use, Reinforcement
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Pinkston, Jonathan W.; Branch, Marc N. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2004
Daily administration of cocaine often results in the development of tolerance to its effects on responding maintained by fixed-ratio schedules. Such effects have been observed to be greater when the ratio value is small, whereas less or no tolerance has been observed at large ratio values. Similar schedule-parameter-dependent tolerance, however,…
Descriptors: Drug Use, Animals, Animal Behavior, Behavioral Science Research
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Lejeune, Helga; Richelle, Marc; Wearden, J. H. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2006
The article discusses two important influences of B. F. Skinner, and later workers in the behavior-analytic tradition, on the study of animal timing. The first influence is methodological, and is traced from the invention of schedules imposing temporal constraints or periodicities on animals in "The Behavior of Organisms," through the rate…
Descriptors: Animals, Animal Behavior, Behavioral Science Research, Scheduling
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Sapolsky, Robert M. – Social Forces, 2006
Philosophers often consider what it is that makes individuals human. For biologists considering the same, the answer is often framed in the context of what are the key differences between humans and other animals. One vestige of human uniqueness still often cited by anthropologists is culture. However, this notion has been challenged in recent…
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Aggression, Animals, Primatology
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Grant, Douglas S. – Learning and Motivation, 2006
Pigeons were trained in a matching task with either color (group color-first) or line (group line-first) samples. After asymmetrical training in which each group was initially trained with the same sample on all trials, marked retention asymmetries were obtained. In both groups, accuracy dropped precipitously on trials involving the initially…
Descriptors: Retention (Psychology), Animals, Cognitive Processes, Animal Behavior
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Laurier, Eric; Maze, Ramia; Lundin, Johan – Mind, Culture, and Activity, 2006
In this article we use actual instances of human conduct with animals to reflect on the debates about animal agency in human activities. Where much of psychology, philosophy, and sociology begin with a fundamental scepticism over animal mind as the grounds for its inquiries, we join with a growing body of work that examines the continuities…
Descriptors: Animals, Physical Activities, Cognitive Processes, Social Environment
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Mazur, James E. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2005
In Experiment 1 with rats, a left lever press led to a 5-s delay and then a possible reinforcer. A right lever press led to an adjusting delay and then a certain reinforcer. This delay was adjusted over trials to estimate an indifference point, or a delay at which the two alternatives were chosen about equally often. Indifference points increased…
Descriptors: Probability, Reinforcement, Responses, Intervals
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Owings, Donald H. – European Journal of Developmental Science, 2007
Gilbert Gottlieb's data and epigenetic approach support the conclusion that organisms are functionally-whole agents at each phase of development rather than simply incompletely developed adults prior to sexual maturity and deteriorated adults in old age. This implies that organisms construct distinct ontogenetic niches at each phase of…
Descriptors: Evolution, Developmental Stages, Adolescent Development, Age Differences
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Moore, Jay; Friedlen, Karen E. – Psychological Record, 2007
Pigeons were trained in three experiments with a two-key, concurrent-chains choice procedure. The initial links were equal variable-interval schedules, and the terminal links were random-time schedules with equal average interreinforcement intervals. Across the three experiments, the pigeons either stayed in a terminal link until a reinforcer was…
Descriptors: Intervals, Reinforcement, Evaluation Methods, Hyperactivity
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Schneider, Susan M.; Harshaw, Christopher – European Journal of Developmental Science, 2007
Gottlieb's (1991/2007) target article represents a milestone in our understanding of the impact of social experience on developmental malleability. Interactions across the species-typical and operant behavior categories are increasingly understood to exist. The social contingencies present in the normal species-typical developmental manifold are…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Developmental Stages, Individual Development, Operant Conditioning
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