2014
DOI: 10.1007/s40732-014-0067-2
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Effects of Training Structure and the Passage of Time on Trained and Derived Performance

Abstract: Conditional discriminations established using a linear series training structure were shown in a previous study to be intact when unreinforced trials assessing such performance were presented interspersed among stimulus equivalence test trials. Experimenter-defined correct performance on these trials was seen both for participants responding in accordance with stimulus equivalence and for some participants who did not. The goal of the current study was to investigate the status of previously trained relations … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
(26 reference statements)
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“…In addition, the MTS procedure can vary in structure of initial training among linear protocols (consequating relating each stimulus as both sample to one comparison and comparison to another sample), oneto-many (consequating relating a single sample to different comparisons, as in the current study), or many-to-one (consequating relating many samples to single comparison). Data have been mixed with regard to the relative effectiveness of these structures at establishing mutual and combinatorial entailment (e.g., Arntzen & Holth, 1997Arntzen & Nikolaisen, 2011;Arntzen & Vaidya, 2008;Eilifsen & Arntzen, 2015;Fields et al, 1999;Hove, 2003;Saunders et al, 2005;Smeets & Barnes-Holmes, 2005). The present study data provide some support for extant literature on the appropriateness of one-to-many matching-to-sample procedures for establishing mutual and combinatorial entailment (e.g., Bordieri et al, 2016;Keenan et al, 2015;Stewart et al, 2015).…”
Section: Limitations and Future Directionssupporting
confidence: 68%
“…In addition, the MTS procedure can vary in structure of initial training among linear protocols (consequating relating each stimulus as both sample to one comparison and comparison to another sample), oneto-many (consequating relating a single sample to different comparisons, as in the current study), or many-to-one (consequating relating many samples to single comparison). Data have been mixed with regard to the relative effectiveness of these structures at establishing mutual and combinatorial entailment (e.g., Arntzen & Holth, 1997Arntzen & Nikolaisen, 2011;Arntzen & Vaidya, 2008;Eilifsen & Arntzen, 2015;Fields et al, 1999;Hove, 2003;Saunders et al, 2005;Smeets & Barnes-Holmes, 2005). The present study data provide some support for extant literature on the appropriateness of one-to-many matching-to-sample procedures for establishing mutual and combinatorial entailment (e.g., Bordieri et al, 2016;Keenan et al, 2015;Stewart et al, 2015).…”
Section: Limitations and Future Directionssupporting
confidence: 68%
“…Moreover, a future study employing the stimulus equivalence paradigm could increase the size of the relational classes from 4 to 5 or 6, increase the number of relations from 2 to 3, and use a training structure other than simultaneous one-to-many (e.g., linear series). These variables have all been shown to influence emergence of stimulus equivalence (e.g., Arntzen, 2012;Ellifsen & Arntzen, 2015;Fields et al, 1997) and should therefore reduce the likelihood of a ceiling effect, allowing for the predicted effects of sleep to be identified.…”
Section: Time Sleep and Equivalence 13mentioning
confidence: 99%