Tomanari, G. Y., Sidman, M., Rubio, A. R. & Dube, W. V. (2006).
Equivalence classes with requirements for short response latencies.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 85, 349-369.
Five adult humans were tested for emergent conditional discriminations under
rapid-responding contingencies. During four-comparison matching-to-sample baseline
training (AB and AC), limited-hold contingencies for responding to samples and
comparisons were gradually restricted to the shortest duration consistent with
at least 95% accuracy and no more than 5% failures to respond. The final
limited-hold values were 0.4-0.5 s for samples and 1.2-1.3 s for comparisons;
mean response latencies were 0.15-0.28 s for samples and 0.59-0.73 s for
comparisons; inter-trial intervals were 0.4 s. With these fast-responding
requirements, test blocks presented 72 probe trials interspersed among 72
baseline trials, all without programmed differential consequences. Four
equivalence test blocks (BC and CB probes, which tested simultaneously for
both symmetry and transitivity) were followed by four symmetry (BA and CA
probes) test blocks. Three subjects’ results documented emergent performances
indicative of equivalence classes despite fast-responding requirements that
severely limited the time available for mediating vocal or subvocal responses.
For these three subjects, mean latencies were slightly shorter in baseline
trials than in probes, and shorter on symmetry than on equivalence probes.
These differences, however, were usually less than the differences among mean
latencies on the different types of trials within the baseline and
probed performances.
Key words: stimulus equivalence, response latencies, naming, pointing, adult humans