Cullinan, V. A., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P. M. (2001).
A precursor to the relational evaluation procedure: Searching for the contextual cues that control equivalence responding.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
76, 339-349.
The precursor to the relational evaluation procedure (pREP) is a
go/no-go successive discrimination procedure for examining
stimulus equivalence. Previous research has shown that it does
not readily produce equivalence responding unless some
matching-to-sample (MTS) procedures are incorporated into the
experimental sequence. Two experiments attempted to identify
contextual cues that would generate equivalence responding on the
pREP. Experiment 1 examined the effects of using abstract symbols
or various verbal labels as response options on the pREP. Only
the words same and different, when used as response
options, reliably produced equivalence responding across 4
subjects. Experiment 2 examined different pretraining
preparations designed to attach the functions of the words
same and different to abstract symbols that could
then be used as response options on the pREP. The most effective
pretraining procedure involved multiple-exemplar training during
which subjects were trained to respond to abstract symbols in the
presence of pairs of stimuli that were either formally the same
or different. The abstract symbols were subsequently used as
response options with the pREP, and all subjects reliably
demonstrated equivalence responding. The findings suggest that
the relations of same and different may be
fundamental to equivalence responding. These findings are
discussed in terms of what they suggest about the nature of the
equivalence phenomenon specifically and derived relational
responding more generally.
Key words: stimulus equivalence, go/no-go successive
discrimination, matching to sample, response interval, adult
humans