A dynamic route-finder for the cognitive map.

dc.contributor.author

Reid, A

dc.contributor.author

Staddon, JER

dc.date.accessioned

2013-05-18T09:25:33Z

dc.date.available

2013-05-18T09:25:33Z

dc.date.issued

1998

dc.description.abstract

Cognitive behaviorist E. C. Tolman (1932) proposed many years ago that rats and men navigate with the aid of cognitive maps, but his theory was incomplete. Critic E. R. Guthrie (1935) pointed out that Tolman's maps lack a rule for action, a route finder. We show that a dynamic model for stimulus generalization based on an elementary diffusion process can reproduce the qualitative properties of spatial orientation in animals: area-restricted search in the open field, finding shortcuts,barrier learning (the Umweg problem), spatial "insight" in mazes, and radial maze behavior. The model provides a behavioristic reader for Tolman's cognitive map.

dc.identifier.citation

Reid, A. K., & Staddon, J. E. R. (1998) A dynamic route-finder for the cognitive map. Psychological Review, 105, 585-601.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/7383

dc.publisher

American Psychological Association

dc.relation.journal

Psychological Review

dc.subject

spatial navigation, ants, diffusion, model, generalization

dc.title

A dynamic route-finder for the cognitive map.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Staddon, JER|0000-0003-0205-5083

duke.description.volume

105

pubs.begin-page

585

pubs.end-page

601

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