Harvard Psychological Studies, Bind 2Hugo Münsterberg, Herbert Sidney Langfeld Macmillan Company, 1906 Only contributions from members of the Harvard Psychological Laboratory will be printed in these volumes, which will appear at irregular intervals. |
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æsthetic after-image alternate angle animals apparatus appear apperception arches associations auditory stimulus average cards centimetres centre chronoscope color consciousness constant errors crayfish curvature curve dicrotic distance edge effect electric elements Emerson Emerson Hall equal experimental experiments exposure eyes fact factor favor feeling feeling-tone females figure fovea frog fusion geotaxis give given greater hand HUGO MÜNSTERBERG increase influence inhibition intensity interval introspection investigation irradiation judgments less light males mean errors ment method millimetres motor moved movement negative neurin nystagmus objects observer pendulum philosophy phototaxis physiological position processes psychology reaction-time reactions records reënforcement repetition retinal images rhythm rhythmic rhythmic unit rotation seems sensations slow eye-movements speed sphygmographic subjects symmetry synapses Table tendency tests thigmotaxis tion tones touch unit variation vary visual angles visual control visual field whole ΙΟ
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Side 5 - I'll not deny you make A very pretty squirrel track ; Talents differ ; all is well and wisely put ; If I cannot carry forests on my back, Neither can you crack a nut.
Side 411 - The sense of hearing apparently serves rather as a warning sense which modifies reactions to other simultaneous or succeeding stimuli than as a control for definite auditory motor reactions. 2. Experimental tests prove that sounds modify the frog's reactions to visual and tactual stimuli. When the sound accompanies the visual or tactual stimulus it serves to reinforce the visual or tactual reaction, but when given alone it never causes a motor reaction.
Side 434 - ... the cat, and in the complexity of the associations which it is able to form, it stands nearer the monkey. Cole has demonstrated the ability of the raccoon to learn by being put through an act, and he has obtained what appears to be excellent evidence of the presence of visual memory. In 1 Porter, JP A preliminary Study of the Psychology of the English Sparrow.
Side 70 - Weber, über die Anwendung der Wellenlehre auf die Lehre vom Kreislaufe des Blutes und insbesondere auf die Pulslehre.