Lane, S. D., & Critchfield, T. S. (1998).
Classification of vowels and consonants by individuals with moderate mental retardation: Development of arbitrary relations via match-to-sample training with compound stimuli.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
31, 21-41.
This study explored whether an identity-matching-based stimulus
equivalence procedure could be used to teach vowel and consonant
stimulus classes to 2 adolescent females with moderate mental
retardation. Delayed match-to-sample trials presented a compound
sample stimulus consisting of printed letters and a spoken word
("vowel" or "consonant"). The correct
comparison stimulus matched only one of the letters in the
compound sample. Subsequently, test trials assessed whether
arbitrary relations had formed among the individual stimuli from
each compound sample and whether stimuli from different compound
samples had merged into larger stimulus classes. Both
participants acquired five-member classes of vowel and consonant
stimuli, which subsequently generalized to vocal classification
and to identification in the context of four-letter words.
Follow-up tests showed that the generalized performances remained
intact after 6 weeks. These procedures suggest an economical
approach to stimulus class development.
DESCRIPTORS: identity matching, complex stimuli, stimulus
equivalence, developmental disability, computer touch screen