Fields Lanny, Tittelbach Danielle, Shamoun Kimberly, Watanabe Mari, Fitzer Adrienne, Matneja Priya
Department of Psychology, Queens College/CUNY, 65-30 Kissena Boulevard, Flushing, New York 11367, USA.
J Exp Anal Behav. 2007 Jan;87(1):97-119. doi: 10.1901/jeab.2007.10-06.
When the stimuli in one perceptual class (A') become related to the stimuli in another perceptual class (B'), the two are functioning as a single linked perceptual class. A common linked perceptual class would be the sounds of a person's voice (class A') and the pictures of that person (class B'). Such classes are ubiquitous in real world settings. We describe the effects of a variety of training procedures on the formation of these classes. The results could account for the development of naturally occurring linked perceptual classes. Two perceptual classes (A' and B') were formed in Experiment 1. The endpoints of the A' class were called anchor (Aa) and boundary (Ab) stimuli. Likewise, the anchor and boundary stimuli in the B' class were represented as Ba and Bb. In Experiment 2, the A' and B' classes were linked by the establishment of one of four cross-class conditional discriminations: Aa-->Ba, Aa-->Bb, Ab-->Ba, or Ab-->Bb. Results were greatest after Aa-->Bb training, intermediate after Aa-->Ba and Ab-->Ba training, and lowest after Ab-->Bb training. Class formation was influenced by the interaction of the anchor/boundary values and the sample/comparison functions of the stimuli used in training. Experiment 3 determined whether class formation was influenced by different sets of two cross-class conditional discriminations: Aa-->Ba and Ab-->Bb, or Aa-->Bb and Ab-->Ba. Both conditions produced equivalent results. Similarities were attributable to the use of anchor stimuli as samples and boundary stimuli as comparisons in each training condition. Finally, the results afterjoint Aa-->Ba and Ab-->Bb training were much greater than those produced by summing the results of Aa-->Ba training alone and Ab-->Bb training alone. This same synergy was not observed after joint Aa-->Bb and Ab-->Ba training or either alone.
当一个知觉类别(A')中的刺激与另一个知觉类别(B')中的刺激产生关联时,这两者就作为一个单一的关联知觉类别发挥作用。一个常见的关联知觉类别可能是一个人的声音(类别A')和那个人的照片(类别B')。这样的类别在现实世界环境中无处不在。我们描述了各种训练程序对这些类别的形成所产生的影响。这些结果可以解释自然出现的关联知觉类别的发展情况。在实验1中形成了两个知觉类别(A'和B')。A'类别的端点被称为锚定(Aa)和边界(Ab)刺激。同样,B'类别的锚定和边界刺激分别表示为Ba和Bb。在实验2中,通过建立四种跨类别条件辨别之一来将A'和B'类别联系起来:Aa→Ba、Aa→Bb、Ab→Ba或Ab→Bb。在Aa→Bb训练后结果最大,在Aa→Ba和Ab→Ba训练后居中,在Ab→Bb训练后最低。类别形成受到训练中使用的刺激的锚定/边界值与样本/比较功能之间相互作用的影响。实验3确定类别形成是否受到两组不同的跨类别条件辨别:Aa→Ba和Ab→Bb,或者Aa→Bb和Ab→Ba的影响。两种情况产生了等效的结果。相似之处归因于在每个训练条件下使用锚定刺激作为样本和边界刺激作为比较。最后,联合进行Aa→Ba和Ab→Bb训练后的结果远大于单独进行Aa→Ba训练和单独进行Ab→Bb训练结果的总和。在联合进行Aa→Bb和Ab→Ba训练后或单独进行其中任何一个训练后,没有观察到这种相同的协同作用。