Results for ' test stimulus'

989 found
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  1.  20
    Test stimulus representation and experimental context effects in memory scanning.R. L. Klatzky, J. F. Juola & R. C. Atkinson - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 87 (2):281.
  2.  16
    Test stimulus sequence effects on object orientation and line tilt generalization.Patrick A. Cabe - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (6):393-396.
  3.  24
    Effect of test stimulus range on stimulus generalization in human subjects.Gary Hansen, Arthur Tomie, David R. Thomas & Doris H. Thomas - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (4):634.
  4.  53
    Stimulus and response generalization: Tests of a model relating generalization to distance in psychological space.Roger N. Shepard - 1958 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 55 (6):509.
  5.  12
    The Facial Expressive Action Stimulus Test. A test battery for the assessment of face memory, face and object perception, configuration processing, and facial expression recognition.Beatrice de Gelder, Elisabeth M. J. Huis in ‘T. Veld & Jan Van den Stock - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:162648.
    There are many ways to assess face perception skills. In this study, we describe a novel task battery FEAST (Facial Expression Action Stimulus Test) developed to test recognition of identity and expressions of human faces as well as stimulus control categories. The FEAST consists of a neutral and emotional face memory task, a face and object identity matching task, a face and house part-to-whole matching task, and a human and animal facial expression matching task. The identity (...)
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  6.  23
    Tests of three hypotheses about the effective stimulus in serial learning.Robert K. Young - 1962 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 63 (3):307.
  7.  21
    Test of a prediction of stimulus sampling theory in probability learning.Norman H. Anderson - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (4):499.
  8.  17
    A test of a statistical learning theory model for two-choice behavior with double stimulus events.Norman H. Anderson & David A. Grant - 1957 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 54 (5):305.
  9.  24
    Multidimensional stimulus control: Effects of training and/or testing.Frederick L. Newman, C. Frank Andreone, Lynne Washburn & Ronald B. Purtle - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 93 (2):290.
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  10.  16
    Stimulus generalization as a function of the number and range of generalization test stimuli.David R. Thomas & George Bistey - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 68 (6):599.
  11.  22
    Stimulus generalization as a function of testing procedure and response measure.Richard H. Hiss & David R. Thomas - 1963 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 65 (6):587.
  12.  27
    A test of three models for stimulus compounding with children.G. R. Sommer, W. E. Jeffrey & R. Shoemaker - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 67 (1):52.
  13.  17
    Test of stimulus sampling theory for a continuum of responses with unimodal noncontingent determinate reinforcement.Patrick Suppes & Raymond W. Frankmann - 1961 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 61 (2):122.
  14.  23
    Stimulus generalization after training on three stimuli: A test of the summation hypothesis.Harry I. Kalish & Norman Guttman - 1959 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 57 (4):268.
  15.  20
    A test of the preparatory response theory by measurement of increased stimulus attractiveness following a signal.Dennis B. Wiegal & Albert S. Rodwan - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 86 (2):225.
  16.  21
    Testing the aversiveness of a stimulus by a response-transfer procedure.Harry M. B. Hurwitz & Robert Jordan - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (6):369-370.
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  17.  13
    A test of Murdock’s D scale technique using an unusual stimulus set.Robert Saxe - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (6):585-587.
  18.  18
    Hypothesis testing in stimulus integration tasks of varying difficulty.Kent L. Norman - 1977 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 9 (2):106-108.
  19.  12
    Stimulus generalization following intradimensional discrimination training: Between- and within-test comparisons.T. T. Hirota & T. A. Clarkson - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 2 (1):3-5.
  20.  59
    Is Conscious Stimulus Identification Dependent on Knowledge of the Perceptual Modality? Testing the “Source Misidentification Hypothesis”.Morten Overgaard, Jonas Lindeløv, Stinna Svejstrup, Marianne Døssing, Tanja Hvid, Oliver Kauffmann & Kim Mouridsen - 2013 - Frontiers in Psychology 4.
  21.  19
    Masking of stimulus control during generalization testing.David R. Thomas, Marilla D. Svinicki & John G. Svinicki - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 84 (3):479.
  22.  13
    An experimental analysis of single stimulus tests and multiple-choice tests of recognition memory.Walter Kintsch - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 76 (1p1):1.
  23.  10
    Effects of Head-Mounted Display on kinematics of the Timed Up and GO test: does the addition of a visual stimulus matter?Rania Almajid, Emily Keshner, W. Wright, Erin Vasudevan & Carole Tucker - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  24.  24
    Effects of duration of masking stimulus and dark interval on the detection of a test disk.John Hogben & Vincent Di Lollo - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 95 (2):245.
  25.  48
    Stimulus-category competition, inhibition, and affective devaluation: a novel account of the uncanny valley.Anne E. Ferrey, Tyler J. Burleigh & Mark J. Fenske - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:92507.
    Stimuli that resemble humans, but are not perfectly human-like, are disliked compared to distinctly human and nonhuman stimuli. Accounts of this “Uncanny Valley” effect often focus on how changes in human resemblance can evoke different emotional responses. We present an alternate account based on the novel hypothesis that the Uncanny Valley is not directly related to ‘human-likeness’ per se, but instead reflects a more general form of stimulus devaluation that occurs when inhibition is triggered to resolve conflict between competing (...)
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  26.  10
    Conflict-Elicited Negative Evaluations of Neutral Stimuli: Testing Overt Responses and Stimulus-Frequency Differences as Critical Side Conditions.Florian Goller, Alexandra Kroiss & Ulrich Ansorge - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  27.  13
    Effects of associative reaction time and spaced presentations of stimulus-test items, response-test items, and stimulus-response repetitions on retention in paired associate learning.Edward C. C. McAllister - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 7 (2):205-207.
  28.  25
    Modulation of executive attention by threat stimulus in test-anxious students.Huan Zhang, Renlai Zhou & Jilin Zou - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  29.  39
    Temporal perception in obese and normal-weight subjects: A test of the stimulus-binding hypothesis.Robert M. Stutz, Joel S. Warm & William A. Woods - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 3 (1):23-24.
  30.  26
    The stimulus-reinforcer hypothesis of behavioral momentum: Some methodological considerations.Carlos F. Aparicio - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (1):90-91.
    This commentary focuses on the stimulus-reinforcer hypothesis of resistance to change. The overall context of reinforcement can account for resistance to extinction. There are ways to systematically test the hypothesis that Pavlovian contingencies account for the behavioral “mass” of discriminated operant behavior.
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  31.  16
    Primary stimulus generalization under different percentages of reinforcement in eyelid conditioning.William E. Vandament & Louis Price - 1964 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 67 (2):162.
  32.  36
    Stimulus encoding and memory.Robert E. Warren - 1972 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 94 (1):90.
  33.  23
    Stimulus labeling, adaptation level, and the central tendency shift.David R. Thomas & Doris H. Thomas - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (5):896.
  34.  9
    Test many theories in many ways.Wilson Cyrus-Lai, Warren Tierney & Eric Luis Uhlmann - 2024 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 47:e37.
    Demonstrating the limitations of the one-at-a-time approach, crowd initiatives reveal the surprisingly powerful role of analytic and design choices in shaping scientific results. At the same time, cross-cultural variability in effects is far below the levels initially expected. This highlights the value of “medium” science, leveraging diverse stimulus sets and extensive robustness checks to achieve integrative tests of competing theories.
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  35.  10
    The Role of Stimulus‐Specific Perceptual Fluency in Statistical Learning.Andrew Perfors & Evan Kidd - 2022 - Cognitive Science 46 (2):e13100.
    Humans have the ability to learn surprisingly complicated statistical information in a variety of modalities and situations, often based on relatively little input. These statistical learning (SL) skills appear to underlie many kinds of learning, but despite their ubiquity, we still do not fully understand precisely what SL is and what individual differences on SL tasks reflect. Here, we present experimental work suggesting that at least some individual differences arise from stimulus-specific variation in perceptual fluency: the ability to rapidly (...)
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  36. Obstacles to Testing Molyneux's Question Empirically.Tony Cheng - 2015 - I-Perception 6 (4).
    There have recently been various empirical attempts to answer Molyneux’s question, for example, the experiments undertaken by the Held group. These studies, though intricate, have encountered some objections, for instance, from Schwenkler, who proposes two ways of improving the experiments. One is “to re-run [the] experiment with the stimulus objects made to move, and/or the subjects moved or permitted to move with respect to them” (p. 94), which would promote three dimensional or otherwise viewpoint-invariant representations. The other is “to (...)
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  37.  36
    Using behavior-analytic implicit tests to assess sexual interests among normal and sex-offender populations.Bryan Roche, Anthony O'Reilly, Amanda Gavin, Maria R. Ruiz & Gabriela Arancibia - 2012 - Socioaffective Neuroscience and Psychology 2.
    Background: The development of implicit tests for measuring biases and behavioral predispositions is a recent development within psychology. While such tests are usually researched within a social-cognitive paradigm, behavioral researchers have also begun to view these tests as potential tests of conditioning histories, including in the sexual domain. Objective: The objective of this paper is to illustrate the utility of a behavioral approach to implicit testing and means by which implicit tests can be built to the standards of behavioral psychologists. (...)
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  38.  9
    Rule learning in a stimulus integration task.Kent L. Norman - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (5):941.
  39.  15
    Testing the Process Dissociation Procedure by Behavioral and Neuroimaging Data: The Establishment of the Mutually Exclusive Theory and the Improved PDP.Jianxin Zhang, Xiangpeng Wang, Jianping Huang, Antao Chen & Dianzhi Liu - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    The process dissociation procedure (PDP) of implicit sequence learning states that the correct inclusion-task response contains the incorrect exclusion-task response. However, there has been no research to test the hypothesis. The current study used a single variable (Stimulus Onset Asynchrony SOA: 850 ms vs. 1350 ms) between-subjects design, with pre-task resting-state fMRI, to test and improve the classical PDP to the mutually exclusive theory (MET). (1) Behavioral data and neuroimaging data demonstrated that the classical PDP has not (...)
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  40. Using the implicit association test does not rule out an impact of conscious propositional knowledge on evaluative conditioning.Jan de Houwer - 2006 - Learning and Motivation 37 (2):176-187.
  41.  43
    Is the sunny side up and the dark side down? Effects of stimulus type and valence on a spatial detection task.Maria Amorim & Ana P. Pinheiro - 2018 - Cognition and Emotion 33 (2):346-360.
    ABSTRACTIn verbal communication, affective information is commonly conveyed to others through spatial terms. This study used a target location discrimination task with neutral, positive and negative stimuli to test the automaticity of the emotion-space association, both in the vertical and horizontal spatial axes. The effects of stimulus type on emotion-space representations were also probed. A congruency effect was observed in the vertical axis: detection of upper targets preceded by positive stimuli was faster. This effect occurred for all (...) types, indicating that the emotion-space association is not dependent on sensory modality and on the verbal content of affective stimuli. (shrink)
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  42. Beyond avatars and arrows: Testing the mentalizing and submentalizing hypotheses with a novel entity paradigm.Evan Westra, Brandon F. Terrizzi, Simon T. van Baal, Jonathan S. Beier & John Michael - forthcoming - Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology.
    In recent years, there has been a heated debate about how to interpret findings that seem to show that humans rapidly and automatically calculate the visual perspectives of others. In the current study, we investigated the question of whether automatic interference effects found in the dot-perspective task (Samson, Apperly, Braithwaite, Andrews, & Bodley Scott, 2010) are the product of domain-specific perspective-taking processes or of domain-general “submentalizing” processes (Heyes, 2014). Previous attempts to address this question have done so by implementing inanimate (...)
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  43.  24
    A double stimulation test of ideomotor theory with implications for selective attention.Anthony G. Greenwald - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 84 (3):392.
  44.  19
    Conceptual distortions of hand structure are robust to changes in stimulus information.Klaudia B. Ambroziak, Luigi Tamè & Matthew R. Longo - 2016 - Consciousness and Cognition 61:107-116.
    Hands are commonly held up as an exemplar of well-known, familiar objects. However, conceptual knowledge of the hand has been found to show highly stereotyped distortions. Specifically, people judge their knuckles as farther forward in the hand than they actually are. The cause of this distal bias remains unclear. In Experiment 1, we tested whether both visual and tactile information contribute to the distortion. Participants judged the location of their knuckles by pointing to the location on their palm directly opposite (...)
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  45.  11
    Impact of brand hate on consumer well-being for technology products through the lens of stimulus organism response approach.Saman Attiq, Abu Bakar Abdul Hamid, Hassan Jalil Shah, Munnawar Naz Khokhar & Amna Shahzad - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Consumer well-being is a micromarketing concept that emphasizes on contributions of marketing activities in social welfare. The major objective of the current study is to analyze the impact of self-incongruence on brand dissatisfaction, brand hate, and consumer well-being. This study has utilized the Self-incongruity Theory and the Stimulus-Organism-Response model to test the impact of self-incongruity on anti-consumption and consumer voice behaviors, and subsequent effects on consumer well-being. Data were collected from young consumers of technology products from major cities (...)
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  46.  11
    Emotional arousal does not modulate stimulus-response binding and retrieval effects.Carina G. Giesen & Andreas B. Eder - 2022 - Cognition and Emotion 36 (8):1509-1521.
    The adaptation-by-binding account and the arousal-biased competition model suggest that emotional arousal increases binding effects for transient links between stimuli and responses. Two highly-powered, pre-registered experiments tested whether transient stimulus-response bindings are stronger for high versus low arousing stimuli. Emotional words were presented in a sequential prime-probe design in which stimulus relation, response relation, and stimulus arousal were orthogonally manipulated. In Experiment 1 (N = 101), words with high and low arousal levels were presented individually in prime (...)
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  47.  25
    Encoding variability: Tests of the Martin hypothesis.Robert F. Williams & Benton J. Underwood - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 86 (2):317.
  48.  26
    Pain measurement by the radiant heat method: individual differences in pain sensitivity, the effects of skin temperature, and stimulus duration.James E. Birren, Roland C. Casperson & Jack Botwinick - 1951 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 41 (6):419.
  49.  4
    Learning of affective meaning: revealing effects of stimulus pairing and stimulus exposure.Bruno Richter & Mandy Hütter - 2021 - Cognition and Emotion 35 (8):1588-1606.
    Charles E. Osgood's theory of affective meaning defines affect as interplay of three meaning dimensions – evaluation, potency, and activity – that represent the central constituents of our affective ecology. Based on a rigorous Brunswikian sampling procedure, we selected a representative set of stimuli that mirror this ecology. A germane informative analysis explicates and corroborates the sampling approach. We then report two experiments testing whether these dimensions of affective meaning can be learnt by means of stimulus pairing and (...) exposure. Our findings yield evidence for (1) stimulus pairing effects on evaluation and activity, and (2) stimulus exposure effects on potency and activity. Overall, the findings reveal that stimulus pairing and stimulus exposure differentially influence the learning of dimensions of affective meaning. We discuss implications of this research for current emotion theories as well as its contribution to research in the cognition–emotion interface. Finally, we argue that the implementation of representative design by virtue of Brunswikian sampling promotes theory development and opens new research avenues for an original and creative science of cognition and emotion. (shrink)
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  50.  63
    An experimental test of the sign-gestalt theory of trial and error learning.K. W. Spence & R. Lippitt - 1946 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 36 (6):491.
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