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  • [[category:time]]
    71 bytes (10 words) - 14:48, 10 September 2012
  • the date (and, optionally, time) when an item was posted to this site
    102 bytes (17 words) - 01:13, 1 November 2012
  • For the time being, editing is disabled for anyone but admins. This may change in the fu
    541 bytes (79 words) - 16:04, 9 September 2012
  • ...; and profoundly wrong – view of a great man. Not B. F. Skinner this time, but a much grander figure, none other than Charles Darwin. Fodor's often m
    671 bytes (89 words) - 18:48, 8 August 2020
  • ...', that publishes original research and solicited reviews, all at the same time. A few other journals occasionally invite comments on a particularly contr
    4 KB (576 words) - 11:26, 14 August 2006
  • ...are remembered until a response is emitted, and reinforcers reach back in time to effect this response in the presence of the remembered stimulus...]] ..., and physiology must require that the memory of an event flows forward in time, rather than the reinforcer effect flowing backwards. But the response-cent
    9 KB (1,301 words) - 16:50, 25 July 2020
  • * Timestamp will be set to the time at which you first preview the post
    2 KB (328 words) - 20:53, 18 May 2022
  • ...ecies and are capable of metacognition. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that rats are capable of metacognition – i.e., they know when they do
    1 KB (226 words) - 17:20, 25 July 2020
  • ...r example, Krebs & Davies, 1978, or Staddon, 1980). Now, apparently, it is time for economics to make the same transition from optimality theory to some ki ...ortunately we know so little about how the brain actually works, as a real-time machine, that this is rarely possible. For example, behavior shows that ani
    8 KB (1,335 words) - 14:20, 25 July 2020
  • Note: [[:category:obsolete|Obsolete stuff]] to go back and delete as time permits
    3 KB (529 words) - 01:33, 13 September 2012
  • ...Sec-ond, it is an analysis of what I think went wrong with behaviorism as time went on. Third it is a proposal for a theoretical behaviorism. I describe ...rimental methods for studying the behavior of individual organisms in real time. The dis-covery of reinforcement schedules was a great advance and opened
    7 KB (1,117 words) - 00:52, 26 July 2020
  • ...the case for monotonic decline is hard to make. I grew up in London at a time when most houses were heated by open coal fires. “Pea-soup” fogs, in w ...20th-century psychobiology. Studying behavior in single organisms in real time was a huge advance. The rich lode of orderly data on reinforcement schedul
    7 KB (1,166 words) - 21:02, 26 July 2020
  • ...three years of austerity and the plentiful savings accumulated during that time, fueled a consumer boom that maintained industrial production (though now f
    5 KB (723 words) - 21:15, 26 July 2020
  • [[TextAbove::It’s time to dump NYT columnist Paul Krugman. He writes reasonably well, but he is so
    5 KB (752 words) - 12:24, 4 July 2022