Snow J S, Mercatoris M, Beal D, Weber D
Am J Ment Defic. 1982 Nov;87(3):282-8.
The ability of moderately mentally retarded children to set self-performance standards was investigated. We hypothesized that (a) subjects who received training based on the relational concept of "between" would be able to acquire and retain superior standard-setting performance compared to nontrained control subjects, and (b) those receiving this training would be able to generalize their superior standard-setting performance to a task involving more variable feedback as well as to a conceptually more abstract task. Results indicated that the subjects learned and retained concepts that allowed them to set appropriate or realistic self-performance standards. Further, retarded subjects were able to set appropriate standards when given less restricted feedback than was given during the initial training. On a more abstract picture-matching task, no significant differences were found between the two groups.
对中度智力发育迟缓儿童设定自我表现标准的能力进行了研究。我们假设:(a)与未接受训练的对照组相比,接受基于“之间”关系概念训练的受试者能够获得并保持更优的标准设定表现;(b)接受此训练的受试者能够将其更优的标准设定表现推广到涉及更多可变反馈的任务以及概念上更抽象的任务中。结果表明,受试者学习并保留了使他们能够设定适当或现实的自我表现标准的概念。此外,与初始训练时相比,当给予智力发育迟缓受试者限制较少的反馈时,他们能够设定适当的标准。在一项更抽象的图片匹配任务中,两组之间未发现显著差异。