Clustering in artificial categories: an equivalence analysis.

M Galizio, K L Stewart, C Pilgrim
Author Information
  1. M Galizio: Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina, Wilmington 28403, USA. galizio@uncwil.edu

Abstract

Category clustering is a robust finding in the free recall of familiar category members, but has rarely been studied with artificial categories. In the present study, college students learned artificial categories via stimulus-equivalence methodology. Arbitrary match-to-sample training with nonsense syllables established three interrelated conditional discriminations, and, for most subjects, unreinforced test trials revealed the emergent stimulus-control relations considered to be evidence of equivalence classes. Free-recall tests revealed evidence of significant within-class clustering both before and after equivalence testing, but was more pronounced after the equivalence tests. These findings confirm that classic phenomena like clustering in free recall can be studied with stimulus-equivalence methodology, thus allowing for experimental control over relevant variables.

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Grants

  1. HD34265/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adult
Cluster Analysis
Cognition
Discrimination, Psychological
Female
Humans
Male
Memory
Mental Recall
Practice, Psychological

Word Cloud

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