Abstract
In 3 experiments, humans were tested on an analogue of the temporal generalization procedure used by Church and Gibbon (1982) with rats. In Experiment 1, a 400-ms tone was the standard duration, with 6 nonstandard durations spaced in equal arithmetic of logarithmic steps around it. Temporal generalization gradients peaked at the standard, with asymmetry in real time, as stimuli that were longer than the standard produced more yes responses than stimuli that were shorter by the same amount
Published Version
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