학술논문

Intermittent Consequences and Problem Solving: The Experimental Control of 'Superstitious' Beliefs.
Document Type
Article
Source
Psychological Record. Apr1994, Vol. 44 Issue 2, p155-169. 15p.
Subject
*CONVERGENT thinking
*ANALYTICAL skills
*LATERAL thinking
*SCIENTISTS' attitudes
*DIVERGENT thinking
Language
ISSN
0033-2933
Abstract
Three groups of college students were asked to determine how points were earned in a task that allowed the assessment of response variability. All students received points for sequences of eight presses distributed across two keys (four presses on each key). One group received a point for each correct sequence, one group received points on a fixed-ratio 2 schedule, and one group received points on a random-ratio 2 schedule. There were no significant differences in nonverbal response variability across the three groups, and the fixed-ratio 2 and random-ratio 2 groups obtained equivalent point totals. However, participants in the random-ratio group were significantly more likely to write verbal descriptions of the task that made reference to performance-consequence relations that were not in effect. The results demonstrate that superstitious rule generation is more probable when consequences are random and not merely intermittent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]