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Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis logoLink to Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis
. 2000 Summer;33(2):137–150. doi: 10.1901/jaba.2000.33-137

An application of the matching law to evaluate the allocation of two- and three-point shots by college basketball players.

T R Vollmer 1, J Bourret 1
PMCID: PMC1284234  PMID: 10885523

Abstract

We applied the matching equation to evaluate the allocation of two- and three-point shots by male and female college basketball players from a large Division 1 university. The matching law predicts that the proportion of shots taken from three-point range should match the proportional reinforcement rate produced by such shots. Thus, we compared the proportion of three-point shots taken relative to all shots to the proportion of three-point shots scored relative to all shots scored. However, the matching equation was adjusted to account for the greater reinforcer magnitude of the three-point basket (i.e., 1.5 times greater than the two-point basket reinforcer magnitude). For players with substantial playing time, results showed that the overall distribution of two- and three-point shots was predicted by the matching equation. Game-by-game shot distribution was variable, but the cumulative proportion of shots taken from three-point range as the season progressed was predicted almost perfectly on a player-by-player basis for both male and female basketball players.

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Selected References

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