In behaviorism, rate of response is a ratio between two measurements with different units. Rate of responding is the number of responses per minute, or some other time unit. It is usually written as R. Its first major exponent was B.F. Skinner (1939). It is used in the Matching Law.
Responserate may refer to: Responserate (medicine) – the percentage of patients whose cancer shrinks or disappears after treatment Responserate (survey)...
antiphon, a response to a psalm or other part of a religious service Response, a phase in emergency management Responserate (survey) Response, a print and...
Heart rate is the frequency of the heartbeat measured by the number of contractions of the heart per minute (beats per minute, or bpm). The heart rate varies...
complete response (CR) or partial response (PR) to the therapy or intervention. Hence the trials report the complete responserate and the overall response rate...
Starvation response in animals (including humans) is a set of adaptive biochemical and physiological changes, triggered by lack of food or extreme weight...
rapid heart rate in response to exercise. The heart tries to compensate for the energy shortage by increasing heart rate to maximize delivery of oxygen and...
to be confused with the touch responserate, which is the frequency that the touchscreen senses input, or the frame rate, which describes how many images...
a change in the strength of one response that occurs when the rateof reward of a second response, or of the first response under different conditions...
transient enhancement of the neuronal firing activity in response to a step stimulus. The saturation of the firing rate. The values of inter-spike-interval-histogram...
The step responseof a system in a given initial state consists of the time evolution of its outputs when its control inputs are Heaviside step functions...
the relative ratesofresponse and the relative ratesof reinforcement in concurrent schedules of reinforcement. For example, if two response alternatives...
allowed the subject to make one or two simple, repeatable responses, and the rateof such responses became Skinner's primary behavioral measure. Another invention...
rateofresponse inhibition in females, but reduces the rateofresponse inhibition in males. Discipline#Self-discipline Neurobiological effects of physical...
or noninfectious insult. Although the definition of SIRS refers to it as an "inflammatory" response, it actually has pro- and anti-inflammatory components...
bodily functions, such as the heart rate, its force of contraction, digestion, respiratory rate, pupillary response, urination, and sexual arousal. This...
Basal metabolic rate (BMR) is the rateof energy expenditure per unit time by endothermic animals at rest. It is reported in energy units per unit time...
A functional response in ecology is the intake rateof a consumer as a function of food density (the amount of food available in a given ecotope). It...
different levels of light. There are three main types of fluence rate governed responses that are brought about by different levels of light. As the name...
modified to account for the rateofresponseof materials and their non-linear behavior. See the article Linear response function. The first constitutive...
level of fitness, from infants having faster heart rates (110-150 bpm) and the elderly having slower heart rates. Sinus tachycardia is a normal response to...
Solomon in 1949. It is associated with the functional response, which is the change in predator's rateof prey consumption with change in prey density. As...
Heart rate variability (HRV) is the physiological phenomenon of variation in the time interval between heartbeats. It is measured by the variation in...
subject response would result in the marking needle moving vertically along the paper one tick. This makes the rateofresponse the slope of the graph...