Semantic priming and stimulus equivalence, article 1. Effect of pre-training with rapid responding on formation of equivalence classes, article 2
TL;DRAbstract
Article 1: Semantic priming and stimulus equivalence are research areas that study relations between\nstimuli. Semantic priming researchers are interested in the reaction time between a prime and a\nfollowing target. The differences in reaction time are used to make inferences about how we\nstore and retrieve knowledge. Stimulus equivalence researchers present their participants with\nconditional discrimination training with seemingly meaningless stimuli. After this training it is\npossible to present a test for derived relations and the participants will respond correct to stimuli\nthat never has been presented together. The purpose of this paper is first to give an introduction\nto semantic priming, and procedures used in semantic priming research. Secondly to present\nstimulus equivalence, and procedures from stimulus equivalence research. The discussion will\nfocus on how procedures from semantic priming can be used in stimulus equivalence research.\nThere will also be suggestions
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Article 1: Semantic priming and stimulus equivalence are research areas that study relations between\nstimuli. Semantic priming researchers are interested in the reaction time between a prime and a\nfollowing target. The differences in reaction time are used to make inferences about how we\nstore and retrieve knowledge. Stimulus equivalence researchers present their participants with\nconditional discrimination training with seemingly meaningless stimuli. After this training it is\npossible to present a test for derived relations and the participants will respond correct to stimuli\nthat never has been presented together. The purpose of this paper is first to give an introduction\nto semantic priming, and procedures used in semantic priming research. Secondly to present\nstimulus equivalence, and procedures from stimulus equivalence research. The discussion will\nfocus on how procedures from semantic priming can be used in stimulus equivalence research.\nThere will also be suggestions
Keywords
Chat
Click to start Chat