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Hick’s law

in experiments or tasks involving choice reaction time, the finding that the time required to classify a stimulus as being from a particular set increases proportionally with the number of stimuli in the set. Also called Hick–Hyman law. [William Edmund Hick (1912–1974), British psychologist; Ray Hyman (1928–  ), U.S. cognitive psychologist]

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Psychology term of the day

February 17th 2025

maze-bright and maze-dull rats

maze-bright and maze-dull rats

two groups of rats that were separated based on their performance in a standardized maze problem. Those that performed best were bred with each other, as were those that performed most poorly. Over relatively few generations, there was a complete separation in performance, with none of the maze-bright rats overlapping in scores with maze-dull rats. However, the selective breeding appeared to be specific to the maze tests that were used and did not affect learning ability more generally; moreover, maze-dull rats reared in an enriched environment (see enrichment) could perform as well as maze-bright rats.