BM I: ANNOUNCEMENT

BM I: ANNOUNCEMENT

R QAB Society for the Quantitative Analyses of Behavior 27th Annual Meeting, May 27–29, 2004 Sheraton Boston Hotel, Boston, MA A. Charles Catania, U...

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Society for the Quantitative Analyses of Behavior 27th Annual Meeting, May 27–29, 2004 Sheraton Boston Hotel, Boston, MA A. Charles Catania, University of Maryland, Baltimore County. The operant reserve: A computer simulation in (accelerated) real time. Gerd Gigerenzer, Max Planck Institute. Fast and frugal heuristics: An adaptive intelligence of the unconscious? Paulo Guilhardi, Richard Keen, Mika MacInnis & Russell Church, Brown University. The combination rule for multiple time intervals. Eric Heinemann & Sheila Chase, CUNY – Hunter College. Optimal decision processes in pigeons. Kris N. Kirby, Williams College. Discounting and utility. David Laibson, Harvard University. Boundedly rational consumers in the marketplace. Gregory J. Madden, University of Wisconsin – Eau Claire. An empirical analysis of hypothetical rewards in the study of impulsivity: Are these procedures adequate or is the field behaving impulsively? Ralph R. Miller, SUNY – Binghamton. SOCR: A mathematical implementation of the extended comparator hypothesis. In Jae Myung, Ohio State University. Applying Occam’s razor in quantitative modeling. Allen Neuringer Claire Miller & Greg Jensen, Reed College. Reasons to respond randomly. John A. Nevin, Timothy Shahan & Michael Davison. University of New Hampshire, Utah State University, and University of Auckland. A momentum-based model of attending and remembering. Stathis Papachristos & C.R. Gallistel, Rutgers University. Autoshaped head poking in the mouse: A quantitative analysis of the learning curve. Peter Urcuioli, Purdue University. Responses and acquired equivalence classes. Anthony A. Wright & Jeffrey S. Katz, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. Abstract concept learning. The following Invited Preeminent Tutorials are during the normal ABA program. These tutorials will also be available as inexpensive videotapes for classroom use. Invited Preeminent Tutorials: From Basics to Contemporary Paradigms M. Jackson Marr, Georgia Institute of Technology. What good is mathematics in behavior analysis? Chair: Peter Killeen, Arizona State University Michael Perone, West Virginia University. Behavioral variability: Control, description, and analysis. Chair: Marc Branch, University of Florida Jack J. McDowell, Emory University. Fitting equations to data. Chair: Randolph Grace, University of Canterbury James E. Mazur, Southern Connecticut State University. Choice and the hyperbolic decay of reinforcer strength. Chair: Armando Machado, University of Minho For further information, visit the website at: http://sqab.psychology.org or contact Randolph Grace, Program Chair, at [email protected]

doi:10.1016/S0376-6357(04)00115-9