Roche, B., & Barnes, D. (1997).
A transformation of respondently conditioned stimulus function in accordance with arbitrarily applicable relations.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
67, 275-301.
Adult male subjects saw a sexual film clip paired with a nonsense
syllable (C1). Similarly, an emotionally neutral film clip was
paired with a second nonsense syllable (C3). Responses to the
nonsense syllables were recorded as skin resistance responses.
Subjects were also trained in a series of related conditional
discriminations, using the C1 and C3 stimuli, from which the
following equivalence relations were predicted; A1-B1-C1,
A2-B2-C2, and A3-B3-C3. Some subjects were given
matching-to-sample (equivalence) tests after the conditional
discrimination training (Experiment 1), whereas others were not
(Experiment 2). Subjects were tested for a transformation of
eliciting functions by presenting the A1 and A3 stimuli, which
were related through equivalence to C1 and C3, respectively. Five
of the 6 subjects who showed significantly greater conditioned
responses to C1 than to C3, also showed significantly greater
skin resistance responses to A1 than to A3. Two additional
subjects demonstrated a transformation of an eliciting stimulus
function in accordance with five-member equivalence relations
(Experiment 3), and another 5 subjects demonstrated similar
effects in accordance with the relations of sameness and
opposition (Experiment 4).
Key words: equivalence, opposition, transformation of function,
respondent conditioning, sexual arousal, electrodermal responses,
humans