Visceral learning as problem solving

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Date
1982
Authors
Roberts, Larry E.
Marlin, Richard G.
Keleher, B.
Williams, Robert J.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
North Holland
Abstract
One purpose of this paper is to describe some experiments that have examined what subjects learn about a visceral target as a consequence of training on a feedback task. Initially this research was undertaken to explore the proposition (implicit in Brcner, 1974a) that control of the viscera is possible only when subjects have learned to recognize events associated with the production of target behavior. Subsequent efforts to explain current findings have led us to employ a tentative theoretical framework for the study of learning mechanisms that bears greater resemblance to analyses of human problem solving than to motor skills and other models that currently dominate the visceral learning literature (Schwartz and Beatty, 1977). A second purpose of this paper is to briefly describe this framework.
Description
Abstract only.
Keywords
Biofeedback training
Citation
Roberts, L. E., Marlin, R. G., Keleher, B., & Williams, R. J. (1982). Visceral learning as problem solving. In E. Richter-Heinrich and N.E. Miller (Eds.), Biofeedback: Basic problems and Clinical Applications (pp. 33-47). New York: North Holland.
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