Galizio, M., Stewart, K. L., & Pilgrim, C. (2004).
Typicality effects in contingency-shaped generalized equivalence classes.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 82, 253-273.
Two experiments were conducted using match-to-sample methodologies in an effort
to model lexical classes, which include both arbitrary and perceptual relations
between class members. Training in both experiments used a one-to-many mapping
procedure with nonsense syllables as samples and eight sets of abstract stimuli
as comparisons. These abstract stimuli differed along a number of dimensions,
four of which were critical to the experimenter-defined class membership. Stimuli
in some comparison sets included only one of the class-defining features, but
stimuli in other sets included two, three or all four of the critical features.
After mastery of the baseline training, three types of probe tests were
conducted: symmetry, transitivity/equivalence, and novel probe tests in which
the training nonsense syllables served as samples, and comparisons were novel
abstract stimuli that included one or more of the class-defining features.
Symmetry and transitivity/equivalence probe tests showed that the stimuli
used in training became members of equivalence classes. The novel stimuli
also became class members on the basis of inclusion of any of the critical
features. Thus, these probe tests revealed the formation of open-ended
generalized equivalence classes. In addition, typicality effects were observed
such that comparison sets with more critical features were learned with fewer
errors, responded to more rapidly, and judged to be better exemplars of the class.
Contingency-shaped stimulus classes established through a match-to-sample procedure
thus show several important behavioral similarities to natural lexical categories.
Key words: stimulus equivalence, categorization, concept learning,
stimulus control, typicality effects, prototypes, adult humans