Interactions among emergent relations during equivalence class formation.

L Fields, B J Adams, S Newman, T Verhave
Author Information
  1. L Fields: College of Staten Island/CUNY 10301.

Abstract

The interactions among symmetry, transitivity, and equivalence tests during the formation of 3-member equivalence classes were studied with 14 college students. After training AB and BC, a test with BA, CB, AC, and CA was conducted concurrently. Failure led to serial testing with probes for CA equivalence, BA symmetry, CA equivalence, CB symmetry, CA equivalence, AC transitivity, and CA equivalence. For five subjects, equivalence tests were passed immediately once BA and CB symmetry as well as AC transitivity had been induced. Thus, symmetry and transitivity were precursors for successful performance on equivalence tests. The conjoint function of symmetry and transitivity was assessed with the equivalence probes. As the equivalence probes were passed immediately, the presence of symmetry alone and transitivity alone were sufficient for their conjoint function without additional intervention. For different subjects, transitivity alone and symmetry were induced either directly with BA, CB, or AC probes or indirectly with equivalence probes. Equivalence probes can also induce various combinations of symmetry and transitivity. Thus, different subjects formed classes in various patterns at different rates.

Grants

  1. R01-HD21110/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Discrimination Learning
Equipment Design
Female
Humans
Male
Models, Psychological
Psychological Tests
Psychology, Experimental
Students
Universities

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0equivalencesymmetrytransitivityprobesCABACBACtestssubjectsalonedifferentamongformationclassespassedimmediatelyinducedThusconjointfunctionvariousinteractions3-memberstudied14collegestudentstrainingABBCtestconductedconcurrentlyFailureledserialtestingfivewellprecursorssuccessfulperformanceassessedpresencesufficientwithoutadditionalinterventioneitherdirectlyindirectlyEquivalencecanalsoinducecombinationsformedpatternsratesInteractionsemergentrelationsclass

Similar Articles

Cited By