Publication | Open Access
THE DEVELOPMENT OF DERIVED STIMULUS RELATIONS THROUGH TRAINING IN ARBITRARY‐MATCHING SEQUENCES
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Citations
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References
1983
Year
Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceNeurolinguisticsCognitionPsycholinguisticsPsychologySocial SciencesDevelopmental PsychologyCognitive DevelopmentLanguage StudiesBehavioral PrinciplePsychophysicsChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesHuman CognitionPattern PresentationTest ProbesExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionTaught Three-stage SequencesImplicit MemoryPredictive CodingArbitrary MatchingLinguisticsCognitive Psychology
Five-year-old children were taught three-stage sequences of arbitrary matching: A-C, B-C, A-D; A-C, B-D, B-C; or A-C, A-D, B-C. Each stage refers to a sample-comparison relation between stimuli. Unreinforced test probes revealed untrained arbitrary matches (B-D, A-D, and B-D, respectively), derivable by substitution of stimuli with a common sample or comparison function. Additional probes revealed further untrained sample-comparison relations derivable by substitution and identity, including the commuted relations D-B, D-A, and D-B, respectively. These processes may have relevance to conceptual and verbal behavior.
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