Fields, L., Doran, E. & Marroquin, M. (2009).
Equivalence class formation in a trace stimulus pairing two-response
format: Effects of response labels and prior programmed transitivity induction.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 92, 57-84.
Three experiments identified factors that did and did not enhance the
formation of two-node four-member equivalence classes when
training and testing were conducted with trials presented in a trace
stimulus pairing two-response (SP2R) format. All trials
contained two separately presented stimuli. Half of the trials,
called within-class trials, contained stimuli from the same
class while the other half, called cross class trials, contained
stimuli from different classes. On within class trials, making a
YES response was correct and making a NO response was wrong.
On cross class trials, making a NO response was correct and
making a YES response was wrong. In Experiment 1, similar
intermediate percentages of participants (about 50%)
formed classes, regardless of whether the responses were labeled
YES and NO or SAME and DIFF. Response labeling thus did not
influence class formation. Regardless of response labels, failures
of class formation were primarily due to failure of class-indicative
responding produced by within-class transitivity probes. In
Experiment 2, only 50% of participants formed classes without prior
training, as in Experiment 1, but 100% of participants formed equivalence
classes after the establishment of a generalized transitivity repertoire
by use of a programmed transitivity induction protocol. Experiment 3
examined two components of the programmed transitivity induction
protocol and found that the exclusion of AC trials had no effect
on the percentage of participants who formed equivalence classes,
while presenting the stimulus sets in randomized order interfered
with equivalence class formation. A further analysis found that a
number of stimulus control topographies differentiated between
individuals who did and did not form equivalence classes. In general,
then, these experiments demonstrate that equivalence classes can be
formed reliably when training and testing are conducted in an SP2R
format, supporting the view that equivalence class formation can
account for the development of conceptual categories in natural settings.
Key words: equivalence classes, trace stimulus-pairing two-response
trial format, successive matching trial format, generalized transitivity
repertoire, keyboarding, college students.