Dube, W.V. & Mcllvane, W.J. (1999).
Reduction of stimulus overselectivity with nonverbal differential observing responses.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
32, 25-34.
Three
individuals with mental retardation exhibited stimulus
overselectivity in a delayed matching-to-sample task in which two
sample stimuli were displayed on each trial. Intermediate accuracy
scores indicated that participants could match one of the samples
but not both of them. Accuracy in a baseline condition was
compared to accuracy with a differential observing response
procedure. This procedure prompted participants to make
simultaneous identity-matching responses that required observation
and discrimination of both sample stimuli. These observing
responses were never followed by differential consequences. When
observing responses were prompted, participants accuracy scores
improved. In a return to the baseline condition, when differential
observing responses were no longer prompted, accuracy returned to
intermediate levels. The results show that stimulus
overselectivity can be greatly reduced by a behavioral
intervention that controls observing behavior and verifies
discrimination, but that exposure to such procedures alone may be
insufficient for lasting benefits.
DESCRIPTORS: stimulus overselectivity, differential observing
responses, matching to sample, mentally retarded