Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8977385 Behavioural Processes 2005 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
A quantitative theory of timing or conditioning can be evaluated with a Turing test in which the behavioral results of an experiment can be compared with the predicted results from the theory. An example is described based upon an experiment in which 12 rats were trained on three fixed-interval schedules of reinforcement, and a simulation of the predicted results from a packet theory of timing. An objective classification rule was used to determine whether a sample from the data or a sample from the theory was more similar to another sample from the theory. With an ideal theory, the expected probability of a correct classification would be 0.5. The observed probability of a correct classification was 0.6, which was slightly, but reliably, greater than 0.5. A Turing test provides a graded metric for the evaluation of a quantitative theory.
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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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