Imam, A. A. (2006).
Experimental control of nodality via equal presentations of conditional
discriminations in different equivalence protocols under speed and no-speed
conditions.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 85, 107-
124.
A within-participant comparison of simple-to-complex, complex-to-simple, and
simultaneous protocols was conducted establishing different sets of three 7-
member equivalence classes for 4 undergraduate students. The protocols were
implemented under either accuracy-only or accuracy-plus-speed conditions while
keeping number of presentations of training and testing trials equal. The
results partially support previous reports of differential effects on
acquisition, with participants completing more blocks in training under the
simultaneous than the complex-to-simple and the simple-to-complex protocols.
Across the protocols, however, the number of trials completed to criterion did
not vary systematically. More important, response speed and accuracy did not
decrease as a function of nodal number, with or without the speed contingency,
or under any protocol. The latter results challenge the generality of previous
reports of the nodality effect and the notion of “relatedness” of equivalence-
class members, and support a reinforcement-contingency, instead of a structural,
perspective on equivalence-class formation.
Key words: equivalence protocols, nodality effect, response speed, response
accuracy, nodal number, stimulus equivalence, matching to sample, mouse click,
humans