
doi: 10.3758/bf03333342
Neonatal dogs were trained on a go, no-go discrimination task using thermal cues and were tested subsequently for inhibitory control. Stable differential responding was obtained but more training was required, and no-go performance was poorer in comparison to previous results on a tactile discrimination. The test trials suggest that the go, no-go behavior was only under differential excitatory control of the thermal cues.
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