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Effect of observing response requirements to sample and comparison stimuli on the establishment of reject control (sample/S- relations)
Authors:William F. Perez  Edson M. Huziwara  Raone M. Rodrigues  Eduardo C. Vilela  Gerson Y. Tomanari  Manish Vaidya
Affiliation:1. Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil;2. Instituto Nacional sobre Comportamento, Cognição e Ensino (INCT-ECCE), Brazil

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil;3. Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil

Instituto Nacional sobre Comportamento, Cognição e Ensino (INCT-ECCE), Brazil;4. University of North Texas

Abstract:The establishment of sample/S- relations (or reject control) during conditional discrimination training (AB, BC) affects transitivity (AC), equivalence (CA) and reflexivity (AA, BB, CC) test outcomes. The present study parametrically evaluated the effects of different observing patterns to comparison stimuli on the establishment of reject control during baseline conditional relation training. A matching-to-sample with observing requirements (MTS-OR) procedure was implemented during AB and BC conditional discrimination training. During training, the participants were required to observe the sample and incorrect comparison on every trial before responding. In addition, the participants were divided into three groups that differed regarding the percentage of training trials on which they were prevented from observing the correct comparison stimuli: 25%, 50%, and 75%. Once the mastery criteria were achieved during training, transitivity (AC), symmetry (BA, CB), equivalence (CA), and reflexivity (AA, BB, CC) tests were conducted with all comparison stimuli visible from the beginning. The results suggest that the number of errors during transitivity, equivalence, and reflexivity tests progressively increased as participants were prevented from observing the correct comparison on a greater number of trials during training. Symmetry test results, however, were not affected by the experimental manipulation. Moreover, the number of participants showing reject-control patterns during tests slightly increased and the number of participants showing select-control patterns decreased as a function of the number of trials on which the participants were prevented from observing the correct comparison. Thus, we suggest that observing patterns during training is a relevant variable that affects equivalence test outcomes.
Keywords:stimulus equivalence  select control  reject control  observing responses  MTS-OR  humans
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