I don't but I remember the name of it was an article about WWII soldiers who wouldn't shoot at the enemy. The amount of soldiers who shot was something dismal like 10%. Not just pull the trigger and shoot but shoot and shoot at the enemy.
A program was developed by the US military to train soldiers to shoot on command. On the shooting range a target popped up the soldier shot it and when he hit it the target would fall. stimulus: target appears, response: shoot the target, reward: target falls, satisfaction. It got to the point where there was no thought it was instinct, or muscle memory.
I see now it is called "Operant conditioning". In the Wikipedia post about operant conditioning citations mention some of what I am talking about. Wikipedia isn't where I originally read about it I read about was probably 10 or 15 years ago?
A program was developed by the US military to train soldiers to shoot on command. On the shooting range a target popped up the soldier shot it and when he hit it the target would fall. stimulus: target appears, response: shoot the target, reward: target falls, satisfaction. It got to the point where there was no thought it was instinct, or muscle memory.
I see now it is called "Operant conditioning". In the Wikipedia post about operant conditioning citations mention some of what I am talking about. Wikipedia isn't where I originally read about it I read about was probably 10 or 15 years ago?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operant_conditioning
Korea and especially Vietnam (better weapons?) saw the amount of solider shooting the enemy go up significantly.
I'm not sure if the rotary phone vs touch tone was in that same article or if I'm mixing it up with another article.