The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task

The Taylor-Spence Drive (D) theory was investigated by comparing performance of high anxiety (HA), medium anxiety (MA) and low anxiety (LA) Ss, as measured by the Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale, on the test list of both a response-equivalence paradigm (A-B, A-C) and a control paradigm (D-B,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wood, Earle William Harold
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35417
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-35417
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-354172018-01-05T17:47:58Z The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task Wood, Earle William Harold Paired-association learning Child development Child psychology The Taylor-Spence Drive (D) theory was investigated by comparing performance of high anxiety (HA), medium anxiety (MA) and low anxiety (LA) Ss, as measured by the Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale, on the test list of both a response-equivalence paradigm (A-B, A-C) and a control paradigm (D-B, A-C). The Ss were 60 grade six boys. The paired-associate learning tasks were designed to detect the debilitating effects of associative-stage competition in the experimental group for HA, MA and LA Ss respectively. A two (experimental conditions) by three (anxiety levels) by six (repeated trials) analysis of variance was performed on the data. There is a significant difference in performance between experimental and control groups on the test list (A-C), p < .0005. There are several trends favourable to the Taylor-Spence D theory but chance factors could have been involved since none of the hypotheses generated from the theory reached the .05 significance level. The first favourable trend is that HA and MA Ss' performance tends to be superior to LA Ss' in the control group on the test list (A-C). Also, HA Ss' performance is inferior to LA Ss' in the experimental group on the test list (A-C) giving support to the interaction hypothesis. Education, Faculty of Graduate 2011-06-14T19:54:50Z 2011-06-14T19:54:50Z 1970 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35417 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Paired-association learning
Child development
Child psychology
spellingShingle Paired-association learning
Child development
Child psychology
Wood, Earle William Harold
The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task
description The Taylor-Spence Drive (D) theory was investigated by comparing performance of high anxiety (HA), medium anxiety (MA) and low anxiety (LA) Ss, as measured by the Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale, on the test list of both a response-equivalence paradigm (A-B, A-C) and a control paradigm (D-B, A-C). The Ss were 60 grade six boys. The paired-associate learning tasks were designed to detect the debilitating effects of associative-stage competition in the experimental group for HA, MA and LA Ss respectively. A two (experimental conditions) by three (anxiety levels) by six (repeated trials) analysis of variance was performed on the data. There is a significant difference in performance between experimental and control groups on the test list (A-C), p < .0005. There are several trends favourable to the Taylor-Spence D theory but chance factors could have been involved since none of the hypotheses generated from the theory reached the .05 significance level. The first favourable trend is that HA and MA Ss' performance tends to be superior to LA Ss' in the control group on the test list (A-C). Also, HA Ss' performance is inferior to LA Ss' in the experimental group on the test list (A-C) giving support to the interaction hypothesis. === Education, Faculty of === Graduate
author Wood, Earle William Harold
author_facet Wood, Earle William Harold
author_sort Wood, Earle William Harold
title The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task
title_short The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task
title_full The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task
title_fullStr The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task
title_full_unstemmed The Taylor-Spence Drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task
title_sort taylor-spence drive theory on a competitive versus noncompetitive paired-associate learning task
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/35417
work_keys_str_mv AT woodearlewilliamharold thetaylorspencedrivetheoryonacompetitiveversusnoncompetitivepairedassociatelearningtask
AT woodearlewilliamharold taylorspencedrivetheoryonacompetitiveversusnoncompetitivepairedassociatelearningtask
_version_ 1718595466005839872