Stimulus equivalence and instructions
Abstract
Article 1 is a literature review which covered the use of instructions in stimulus equivalence research in two time periods. The results showed that instructions differ to a great extent. The most commonly used instruction was categorized as not task specific instructions, followed by general instructions.
Article 2 is an empirical study which investigated if different types of instructions affected responding in accordance with stimulus equivalence. The main results showed that the group which got general instructions had a higher yield of equivalence class responding compared to the other two groups which got specific instructions or no instructions at all.
Description
Master i læring i komplekse systemer