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Matching-to-sample and stimulus-pairing-observation procedures in stimulus equivalence: The effects of number of trials and stimulus arrangement

Kinloch, Jennifer May; McEwan, James Stewart Anderson; Foster, T. Mary

Authors

Jennifer May Kinloch

James Stewart Anderson McEwan

T. Mary Foster



Abstract

Studies comparing the effectiveness of the stimulus-pairing-observation and matching-to-sample procedures in facilitating equivalence relations have reported conflicting findings. This study compared the effectiveness of these procedures and examined the effect of stimulus arrangement and the number of training trials completed prior to each exposure to tests for symmetry and equivalence. Overall, the matching-to-sample procedure resulted in a greater percentage of participants demonstrating equivalence, and with fewer training trials, than did the stimulus-pairing-observation procedure. The one-to-many stimulus arrangement was more effective than the many-to-one and linear arrangements, overall. However, there was an interaction between the type of training procedure and stimulus arrangement. Participants who completed 120 training trials prior to each test were more likely to demonstrate equivalence than participants who completed 60 trials. This appeared to be the result of completing a greater number of trials prior to each test rather than of the number of training trials completed overall.

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Feb 25, 2013
Deposit Date Mar 26, 2024
Journal Psychological Record
Print ISSN 0033-2933
Electronic ISSN 2163-3452
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 63
Issue 1
Pages 157-174
DOI https://doi.org/10.11133/j.tpr.2013.63.1.012
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11846697