Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Universidad Europea de Madrid Spain
2. Department of Psychology Universidade Federal de São Carlos Brazil
3. Instituto Par‐Centro do Ciências e Tecnologia de Comportamento Brazil
4. Instituto Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia sobre Comportamento Cognição e Ensino Brazil
5. School of Psychology Ulster University Coleraine Northern Ireland
Abstract
AbstractThe current study explored the influence of different levels of speaker coherence on rule following and speaker preference. In Experiment 1, rules provided by three different speakers were either 100% accurate, 0% accurate, or 50% accurate/inaccurate. Experiment 2 was similar to Experiment 1 except that the speaker's coherence was adjusted to 80% accurate, 20% accurate, and 50% accurate/inaccurate, respectively. Overall, participants tended to follow coherent speaker rules and avoid following incoherent speaker rules during training and testing phases. The results also indicated that following and not following rules provided by speakers may be generalizable to novel stimuli and maintained in the absence of differential reinforcement (i.e., in experimental test phases). Additionally, in a preference test, participants tended to prefer coherent over incoherent and partially coherent speakers. Furthermore, participants tended to prefer the relatively more incoherent speaker (i.e., 0% or 20% accurate) over the 50% accurate coherent speaker in both experiments. Finally, a comparison of the results of both experiments indicated that different levels of relational coherence affected the variability of rule‐following and speaker preference behaviors. These findings are discussed in the context of the complexities that appear to be involved in rule‐following behaviors and speaker preference.
Funder
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo