Effects of sample duration and spaced repetition upon delayed matching-to-sample in monkeys (Macaca arctoides and Saimiri sciureus)

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Abstract

Delayed matching-to-sample was used to study the effects of sample presentation time and spaced repetition upon delayed matching accuracy in one stumptail monkey and three squirrel monkeys. It was found in Experiment 1 that presenting the sample stimulus for 0.5 sec led to lower matching accuracy than was the case with longer presentation times of 2.5, 5.0, and 10.0 sec. Experiments 2 and 3 investigated the effects of temporally spacing the presentations of the sample stimulus. It was found that spaced repetition led to a deterioration of performance relative to massed repetition. These results are similar to the findings of experiments with pigeons and are contradictory to several previous experiments with monkeys or apes which found no effect of presentation time and a facilitative effect of spaced repetition. It is suggested that the use of monkeys inexperienced in short sample duration matching and tested in operant chambers using a limited set of noncomplex stimuli may be responsible for the discrepancies between these results and those of other experiments with primates. © 1977 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Herzog, H. L., Grant, D. S., & Roberts, W. A. (1977). Effects of sample duration and spaced repetition upon delayed matching-to-sample in monkeys (Macaca arctoides and Saimiri sciureus). Animal Learning & Behavior, 5(4), 347–354. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209577

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