Terrace, H. S. (1963).
Errorless transfer of a discrimination across two continua.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
6, 223-232.
A procedure developed earlier (Terrace, 1963) successfully
trained a red-green discrimination without the occurrence of any
errors in 12 out of 12 cases. Errorless transfer from the red-
green discrimination to a discrimination between a vertical and a
horizontal line was accomplished by first superimposing the
vertical and the horizontal lines on the red and green
backgrounds, respectively, and then fading out the red and the
green backgrounds. Superimposition of the two sets of stimuli
without fading, or an abrupt transfer from the first to the
second set of stimuli, resulted in the occurrence of errors
during transfer. Superimposition, however did result in some
"incidental learning". Performance following
acquisition of the vertical-horizontal discrimination with errors
differed from performance following acquisition without errors.
If the vertical-horizontal discrimination was learned with
errors, the latency of the response to S+ was permanently
shortened and errors occurred during subsequent testing on the
red-green discrimination even though the red-green discrimination
was originally acquired without errors. If the vertical-
horizontal discrimination was learned without errors, the latency
of the response to S+ was unaffected and no errors occurred
during subsequent testing on the red-green discrimination.
[Terrace, H.S. Discrimination learning with and without
"errors". J. exp. Anal. B ehav., 1963, 6, 1-27.