A TRANSFER OF FUNCTIONS THROUGH DERIVED ARBITRARY AND NONARBITRARY STIMULUS RELATIONS

被引:111
|
作者
BARNES, D
KEENAN, M
机构
关键词
STIMULUS EQUIVALENCE; TRANSFER OF FUNCTIONS; S+ RELATIONS; S-; RELATIONS; ARBITRARY RELATIONS; PHYSICAL SIMILARITY; COMPLEX TIME-BASED REINFORCEMENT SCHEDULES; TYPING; KEY PRESS; HUMANS;
D O I
10.1901/jeab.1993.59-61
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
During Experiments 1 and 2, subjects were trained in a series of related conditional discriminations in a matching-to-sample format (Al-B1, Al-Cl and A2-B2, A2-C2). A low-rate performance was then explicitly trained in the presence of BI, and a high-rate performance was explicitly trained in the presence of B2. The two types of schedule performance transferred to the C stimuli for all subjects in both experiments, in the absence of explicit reinforcement through equivalence (i.c., C1 = low rate and C2 = high rate). In Experiment 2, it was also shown that these discriminative functions transferred from the C1-C2 stimuli to two novel stimuli that were physically similar to the C stimuli (SC1 and SC2, respectively). For both these experiments, subjects demonstrated the predicted equivalence responding during matching-to-sample equivalence tests. In Experiments 3 and 4, the conditional discrimination training from the first two experiments was modified in that two further conditional discrimination tasks were trained (Cl-Dl and C2-D2). However, for these tasks the D stimuli served only as positive comparisons, and ND1 and ND2 stimuli served as negative comparisons (i.e., C1 x ND1 and C2 x ND2). Subsequent to training, the negatively related stimuli (ND1 and ND2) did not become discriminative for the schedule performances explicitly trained in the presence of B1 and B2, respectively. Instead, the ND1 stimulus became discriminative for the schedule performance trained in the presence of B2, and ND2 became discrminative for the schedule performance trained in the presence of B1. All subjects from Experiment 4 showed that the novel stimulus SND1, which was physically similar to ND1, became discriminative for the same response pattern as that controlled by ND1. Similarly, SND2, which was physically similar to ND2, became discriminative for the same response pattern as that controlled by ND2. Subjects from both Experiments 3 and 4 also produced equivalence responding on matching-to-sample equivalence tests that corresponded perfectly to the derived performances shown on the transfer of discriminative control tests.
引用
收藏
页码:61 / 81
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A TRANSFER OF FUNCTIONS THROUGH DERIVED ARBITRARY AND NONARBITRARY STIMULUS RELATIONS (VOL 59, PG 71, 1993)
    BARNES
    KEENAN
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF BEHAVIOR, 1993, 60 (01) : 16 - 16
  • [2] Generalized contextual control based on nonarbitrary and arbitrary transfer of stimulus functions
    Perez, William F.
    Harte, Colin
    Barnes-Holmes, Dermot
    Gomes, Caina T.
    Mohor, Barbara
    de Rose, Julio C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF BEHAVIOR, 2023, 119 (03) : 448 - 460
  • [3] Stimulus Equivalence and Nonarbitrary Relations
    Ian Stewart
    Dermot Barnes-Holmes
    Bryan Roche
    Paul M. Smeets
    [J]. The Psychological Record, 2002, 52 : 77 - 88
  • [4] Stimulus equivalence and nonarbitrary relations
    Stewart, I
    Barnes-Holmes, D
    Roche, B
    Smeets, PM
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL RECORD, 2002, 52 (01): : 77 - 88
  • [5] The transfer of social exclusion and inclusion functions through derived stimulus relations
    Munnelly, Anita
    Martin, Georgina
    Dack, Charlotte
    Zedginidze, Ann
    McHugh, Louise
    [J]. LEARNING & BEHAVIOR, 2014, 42 (03) : 270 - 280
  • [6] The transfer of social exclusion and inclusion functions through derived stimulus relations
    Anita Munnelly
    Georgina Martin
    Charlotte Dack
    Ann Zedginidze
    Louise McHugh
    [J]. Learning & Behavior, 2014, 42 : 270 - 280
  • [7] Competing Arbitrary and Nonarbitrary Stimulus Relations: The Effect of Exemplar Training in Adult Participants
    Kenny, Neil
    Devlin, Sarah
    Barnes-Holmes, Dermot
    Barnes-Holmes, Yvonne
    Stewart, Ian
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL RECORD, 2014, 64 (01): : 53 - 61
  • [8] Competing Arbitrary and Nonarbitrary Stimulus Relations: The Effect of Exemplar Training in Adult Participants
    Neil Kenny
    Sarah Devlin
    Dermot Barnes-Holmes
    Yvonne Barnes-Holmes
    Ian Stewart
    [J]. The Psychological Record, 2014, 64 : 53 - 61
  • [9] THE DEVELOPMENT OF DERIVED STIMULUS RELATIONS THROUGH TRAINING IN ARBITRARY-MATCHING SEQUENCES
    WETHERBY, B
    KARLAN, GR
    SPRADLIN, JE
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF BEHAVIOR, 1983, 40 (01) : 69 - 78
  • [10] Descriptive Analyses of Relations among Bidirectional Naming, Arbitrary, and Nonarbitrary Relations
    Morgan, Georgette A.
    Greer, R. Douglas
    Fienup, Daniel M.
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL RECORD, 2021, 71 (03): : 367 - 387