Equivalence relations and the reinforcement contingency |
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Authors: | Sidman M |
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Affiliation: | New England Center for Children, Southborough, Massachusetts 01772-2108, USA. |
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Abstract: | Where do equivalence relations come from? One possible answer is that they arise directly from the reinforcement contingency. That is to say, a reinforcement contingency produces two types of outcome: (a) 2‐, 3‐, 4‐, 5‐, or n‐term units of analysis that are known, respectively, as operant reinforcement, simple discrimination, conditional discrimination, second‐order conditional discrimination, and so on; and (b) equivalence relations that consist of ordered pairs of all positive elements that participate in the contingency. This conception of the origin of equivalence relations leads to a number of new and verifiable ways of conceptualizing equivalence relations and, more generally, the stimulus control of operant behavior. The theory is also capable of experimental disproof. |
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Keywords: | stimulus control equivalence relations conditional discrimination matching to sample simple discrimination theory of equivalence relations |
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