Learning about time Flashcards

1
Q

what is periodic timing?

A

learning to respond at a particular time

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2
Q

what is interval timing?

A

learning to respond after a particular interval of time

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3
Q

Cockroaches and timing, Roberts (1965)

A
  • Increased activity at dusk. When removed visual cues cycle drifted until increased activity started 15 hours before dusk (cycle slightly less than 24 hours).
  • Restoring visual cues produced a gradual shift back to correct
    time
  • Entrainment : light acts as a zeitgeber synchronising the
    internal clock.
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4
Q

Is the apparent internal 24-hour clock the result of
environmental experience? or innate? Bolles & Stokes (1965)

A
  • Subjects born and reared under either 19, 24 or 29 hour light/dark cycles.
  • Then fed at a regular point in their own particular cycle and
    food delivery signalled a few hours before by a change in lighting
  • found animals on the 24-hour cycle learned to anticipate food but others didn’t
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5
Q

what physiological system could provide the 24-hour clock?

A
  • The suprachiasmatic nucleus
    (SCN) of the hypothalamus
  • The metabolic rate in the SCN
    appears to vary as a function
    of the day-night cycle.
  • Lesions of the SCN abolish the circadian regularity of foraging and
    sleeping in the rat
  • Receives direct and indirect inputs from the visual
    system, which could keep circadian rhythms entrained with the real daynight cycle
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6
Q

what cells have a circadian rhythm?

A
  • More recent work suggests every cell in the body has a circadian
    rhythm, which are all under the control of the SCN.
  • This can dictate e.g. circadian variation in
    sensitivity of tumours to chemotherapy
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7
Q

what can disruptions in the circadian rhythms cause?

A
  • Disruption in circadian rhythms can be
    responsible for physical illness (e.g. shift workers more susceptible to heart disease, diabetes, infections and even
    cancer)
  • Sleep and circadian rhythm disruption is also associated with several types of
    mental illness, such as depression, schizophrenia, bipolar illness
  • In Alzheimer’s disease the
    phenomenon of sundowning refers to the worsening of symptoms in afternoon/evening
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8
Q

Church & Gibbon, (1982)

A
  • Rats in lit chamber. - Occasionally houselight went off, for a 0.8, 4.0
    or 7.2 sec (the CS).
  • When the lights went on again a lever was presented for five seconds. If the rat pressed the lever after a
    4-sec CS it got food, otherwise it did not.
  • Then tested with a
    range of stimulus durations (0.8 - 7.2 secs).
  • Found shallow curve after 2 seconds, medium curve after 4 seconds and a flat curve after 8
  • this is due to weber’s law
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9
Q

what is Weber’s Law?

A
  • The just noticeable difference when you change a stimulus isvproportional to the initial intensity/magnitude of the changed stimulus.
  • Hence in absolute terms small amounts judged more accurately than large amounts
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10
Q

Scalar property of timing equation

A

∆I / I = k

∆I = just noticeable change (jnd just noticeable difference)
I = original intensity (of the standard)
K = constant

The critical point is that percentage change is more important than
absolute change

standard – comparison / standard

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11
Q

what is scalar timing theory? . Gibbon, Church & Meck, (1984)

A
  • Pacemaker emits pulses at a
    roughly constant rate t (there
    is random variation).
  • When a stimulus is presented, a
    switch is operated, and the pulses are allowed to accumulate in working memory. This will equal t multiplied by the number of seconds that have passed (N).
  • 5-second stimulus: successive pulses stored in working memory
  • When the reinforcement occurs, pulses stop accumulating; another
    switch allows the number
    of pulses in working memory (N * t) to be stored in reference memory
  • this storage is not completely
    accurate – there is some memory distortion. This is represented by K, a number that is close to 1:
    If K = 1 the memory is accurate;
    If K < 1 a smaller number of pulses is stored;
    If K > 1 a greater number is stored.
  • On each trial the animal compares the number of pulses in working memory
    (N * t) with a random value drawn from those stored in reference memory Nmx
  • This is done by the comparator. If the values
    are close, then the animal responds.
  • Another stimulus
    occurs, and the
    successive number of
    pulses is stored in
    working memory
  • The animal uses ONE
    of the values in
    reference memory to
    decide when to
    respond
  • The comparator works out how close the values are using a ratio rule – NOT a difference rule
  • The animal uses ONE
    of the values in reference memory to decide when to
    respond
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12
Q

Problems with scalar timing theory

A
  • there is no physiological evidence for a pacemaker
  • Instead of a pacemaker, it has been proposed that timing
    could be achieved by a series of oscillators, each of which has two states, on or off.
  • Another solution that has been proposed is the
    Behavioural theory of timing (e.g., Killeen & Fetterman, 1988).
  • Conditioning and timing supposedly occur at the same time, and yet are controlled by completely different learning
    mechanisms
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13
Q

what is Behavioural theory of timing? (e.g., Killeen & Fetterman, 1988)

A
  • When the animal gets a reward, this stimulates behaviour.
  • The animal moves across an invariant series of behavioural
    classes in between reinforcements. A pulse from an internal pacemaker will change the behaviour from one class to another.
  • The behaviour that is occurring when the next
    reinforcer occurs becomes a signal for that reinforcer.
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14
Q

What are real time models? (e.g., Sutton & Barto, 1981)

A
  • They work just like regular conditioning theories.
  • However, the
    stimulus is assumed to change over the course of its presentation, and this allows the animal to learn about when a reinforcer occurs
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