See erratum, JEAB, 2004, 82, 142.
Tyndall, I. T., Roche, B., & James, J. E. (2004).
The relation between stimulus function and equivalence class formation.
Journal of Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
81, 257-266.
Fifty participants were exposed to a simple discrimination-training procedure
during which six S+ functions were established for six arbitrary stimuli, and
S- functions were established for a further six stimuli. Following this training,
each participant was exposed to one of five conditions. In the S+ condition,
participants were exposed to a stimulus equivalence training and testing procedure
using only the six S+ stimuli as samples and comparisons. In the S+/S- condition,
participants were exposed to the same training and testing sequence as in the S+
condition, the difference being that three S+ and three S- stimuli were used as
sample and comparison stimuli, with each set of three corresponding to the
trained equivalence relations. In the S+/S- mixed condition, the S+ and S- stimuli
were assigned to their roles as samples and comparisons in a quasi-random order.
In the S- condition, all six S- stimuli were used. The no-function condition
served as a control condition and employed stimuli for which no stimulus-control
functions had been established. The results showed that, on average, participants
required more testing trials to form equivalence relations when the stimuli
involved were functionally similar rather than functionally different. Moreover,
participants required more test trials to form equivalence relations when novel
arbitrary stimuli, rather than functionally distinct stimuli, were used as
samples and comparisons. The speed of acquisition of stimulus equivalence was
also related to the number of functionally similar stimuli established before
training. These findings indicate a variety of ways in which the emergence of
equivalence relations is affected by the functional classes in which the
relevant stimuli participate.
Key words: stimulus function, functional classes, stimulus equivalence,
anxiety, humans,/.