Kennedy C H
Graduate School of Education, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA.
Behav Processes. 1991 Nov;24(3):219-45. doi: 10.1016/0376-6357(91)90077-D.
Two experiments examined whether the number of nodes separating stimuli influenced human subjects' conditional discrimination performances. In Experiment 1, 3 college students were taught visual conditional discriminations among 2 seven-member stimulus classes using a single-sample/two-comparison procedure. Following training, subjects were exposed to repeated probes for the emergence of derived relations separated by varying numbers of nodes. For all three subjects the results indicated that the order in which derived relations emerged was consistent with the number of nodes separating stimuli. The second experiment sought to extend Experiment 1 with four college students by teaching visual conditional discriminations among 3 seven-member stimulus classes using a single-sample/three-comparison procedure. Results from the repeated probes in Experiment 2 were similar to those of Experiment 1. The two experiments demonstrate that the number of nodes separating stimuli influences the order in which derived relations emerge during equivalence class formation.
两项实验研究了分隔刺激的节点数量是否会影响人类受试者的条件性辨别表现。在实验1中,3名大学生通过单样本/双比较程序学习了2个由7个成员组成的刺激类别之间的视觉条件性辨别。训练后,受试者接受了多次探测,以检测由不同数量节点分隔的派生关系的出现情况。对所有3名受试者的结果表明,派生关系出现的顺序与分隔刺激的节点数量一致。第二个实验试图通过使用单样本/三比较程序,对4名大学生进行3个由7个成员组成的刺激类别之间的视觉条件性辨别,从而扩展实验1。实验2中多次探测的结果与实验1相似。这两项实验表明,分隔刺激的节点数量会影响等价类形成过程中派生关系出现的顺序。