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What starts an internal clock?
Authors:Roberts  Seth; Holder  Mark D
Abstract:Five experiments with 52 male Charles River CD rats investigated under what conditions a stimulus is timed by the internal clock used in time-discrimination procedures. In Exps I–IV, Ss were trained to time one stimulus (e.g., light) and then tested as to whether they timed a stimulus from another modality (e.g., sound). The 2nd stimulus was treated in 3 ways: exposed (presented alone), paired with food, and extinguished. Exps I and II used the peak procedure, similar to a discrete-trial FI schedule, and paired the treated stimulus with food using instrumental training; Exps III and IV used a psychophysical choice procedure and paired the treated stimulus with food using classical conditioning. All 4 experiments found that there was cross-modal transfer of the time discrimination after pairing but not after exposure or extinction. This suggests that Ss' internal clock timed the treated stimulus after pairing but not after exposure or extinction. Exp V suggested that the decline of responding observed in extinction was not due to changes in timing. Thus, the internal clock apparently times stimuli with signal value (associative strength) and does not time stimuli without signal value. (46 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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