Interocular transfer and type of motivation
Autor: | Leslie B. Ward, David C. Bird, Mary Beth Boehm, Charles L. Sheridan |
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Rok vydání: | 1976 |
Předmět: |
Male
Food deprivation Electroshock Motivation Visual perception genetic structures Contrast (statistics) Experimental and Cognitive Psychology Sensory Systems Corpus Callosum Rats Discrimination Psychological Species Specificity Transfer (computing) Statistics Visual Perception Animals Interocular transfer Psychology Food Deprivation Social psychology |
Zdroj: | Perceptual and motor skills. 42(2) |
ISSN: | 0031-5125 |
Popis: | Sechzer (1) found that considerable interocular transfer occurred in split-brained cats under shock but not hunger-motivation. In contrast, Sheridan (2) found little or no interocular transfer in callosum-sectioned albino rats under shock motivation. There appear to be no studies of interocular transfer in rodents using both types of motivation. In the present experiment, 27 male Sprague-Dawley albino tars were given sectioning of the corpus callosum, then tested for interocular transfer of a discrimination of horizontal vs vertical stripes. The method was essentially that of Sheridan (2). Subjects were divided into three groups. Five subjects were trained under minimal shock, 6 were fooddeprived and trained with the largest amount of incentive of wet mash compatible with comp!etion of 12 trials per day, and 6 were run with the smallest incentive of wet mash compatible with completion of the trials. Overlap across groups in various measures of interocular transfer was virtually complete. For example, means and SDs of percentages correct for the first day of the second-eye training were as follows: Shock = 66.2. 15.8; Large Food = 67.8, 14.3; Small Food = 69.3, 15.4. Similar degrees of overlap were found for the measures of trials to criterion, errors to criterion, and percentage transfer. Since differences between groups were unreliable, scores for the groups were pooled and tests made for completeness of interocular transfer. These indicated that transfer was incomplete, though some savings occurred. For example, reliably more errors were taken to reach criterion with the second eye than ro reach the second criterion via the first eye (binomial p = ,002, two-tailed), whereas reliably fewer errors were den to reach criterion via the second eye than on original acquisition (binomial p = .006, two-tailed). These findings are consistent with previous reports on interocular transfer in rats (Z), and their reliability suggests that failure to detect influence of motivational type was not due to insensitivity of the procedure. It appears that the influence of type of motivation reported by Sechzer for cats is not found in rats. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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