Showing posts with label logical nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label logical nature. Show all posts
Saturday, November 10, 2007
Determining Factors in Reflex Response
Let us continue to adhere strictly to our physical point of view regarding response, and endeavor to arrive at a preliminary understanding of the factors which must determine its specificity. The reader is reminded that the concept of response specificity (as defined by Holt) comprises the identification, or selection of a particular kind of reaction (behavior) as a constant function, or accompaniment of a particular object which acts so as to stimulate the nervous system. Reduced to mathematical form, the specificity is represented by a functional equation, such as R & f (O), where O is the object and R is the effector reaction. Although such response functions can seldom be expressed in quantitative form, their logical nature is not affected by this limitation. The statement: "Johnny always cries when he sees a dog, is a functional formulation of this sort which indicates the specificity of Johnny's response to a dog.
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