The phenomenon of supercooperativity in platelet aggregation is manifested by the occurence of clear-cut thresholds in dose-response relationships; in such cases the Hill coefficient has unusually high values. Approximation, by the Hill equation, of the relationship of the rate of arachidonate-induced platelet aggregation to the concentrations of either the inducer or inhibitors such as substituted pyridyl isoxazoles (synthesized by us), indomethacin, and pinane thromboxane A 2 , demonstrated that the Hill coefficients ranged from 30 to 100. 3-(3-Pyridyl)-5-phenylisoxazole, which exhibited maximal anti-aggregatory activity among the synthesized compounds, inhibited neither cyclooxygenase nor thromboxane synthase. The compounds affected the signal transduction pathway at/or posterior to the stage of thromboxane A 2 reception.