Journal article
The consequences of surrendering a degree of freedom to the participant in a contingency assessment task
Abstract
Many studies of contingency judgments have used a task in which, on each trial, the participant is free either to respond or not to respond, and an outcome may, or may not, be presented. Typically, the experimenter specifies a nominal value for the contingency between responding and outcome, but the actual values of a variety of variables experienced by a particular participant depend on that participant's frequency of responding. The results …
Authors
Hannah S; Allan LG; Siegel S
Journal
Behavioural Processes, Vol. 74, No. 2, pp. 265–273
Publisher
Elsevier
Publication Date
February 2007
DOI
10.1016/j.beproc.2006.09.007
ISSN
0376-6357