Stimulus Control: The sought or Unsought influence of the Objects we tend to
Does the mere presence of the things we have tended to influence our actions systematically, in ways that escape our awareness? For example, while entering a tool shed, does perceiving objects that we once tended to (e.g., tools, musical instruments) influence how we then execute a simple action (e.g., flicking the shed’s light switch)? Ancient traditions (e.g., feng shui) and contemporary approaches to action production (e.g., continuous flow and cascade [...]
Within-subjects Extinction and Renewal in Predictive Judgements
Two experiments were conducted with the aim of exploring extinction and [...]
Learning of Contingency/ Causality relationships: An approach to current theoretical trends
En las dos últimas décadas el estudio de la causalidad desde [...]
Latent inhibition in a navigation task: Evidence for the use of associative processes in spatial memory
Rats were trained to find an invisible platform in a [...]
Application of a politomous IRT model for the attainment of commesurable measures in a scale of person-organization fit
En este artículo se aborda el problema del uso de [...]
