Abstract

The aging process can cause cognitive impairments that, if aggravated, may lead to the diagnosis of dementia, with Alzheimer’s Dementia (AD) being the most common. Alzheimer’s Dementia is a neurodegenerative disease that primarily affects memory and language. Teaching procedures based on the paradigm of stimulus equivalence and on teaching by exclusion, although successfully tested in different populations with developmental problems, have generated little research with elderly people with cognitive impairments. This paper presents three studies, with different but complementary aims. Study 1 aimed to assess whether institutionalized elderly people without AD would form classes of equivalent stimuli from a procedure of teaching conditional relationships among dictated words, photos, printed names of professions and degrees of relatedness; additionally, it aimed to verify whether these relationships would be maintained over a month, using three maintenance tests. Five hospitalized elderly subjects underwent teaching of arbitrary relationships in a linear training structure with the teaching of new relationships by exclusion. Equivalence tests were conducted following the teaching phase, and after five, 15 and 30 days. All the elderly subjects demonstrated performance by exclusion in the teaching phase and learned all the relationships within the minimum number of programmed teaching blocks (except for one participant). All the subjects presented the formation of equivalence classes. Four of the elderly subjects presented maintenance of these classes in all the maintenance tests. The procedure, therefore, was effective for these elderly subjects and generated equivalence formation, despite their hospitalization condition. Study 2 aimed to assess whether institutionalized AD patients would demonstrate performance by exclusion and learn the conditional relationships between four dictated names and four photos, in a teaching by exclusion procedure. Six elderly women diagnosed with AD underwent pairing to the sample tasks, in which the relationships between dictated sample and photos were taught by exclusion. Despite all the elderly women responding by exclusion in the first presentation of a new sample stimulus and its corresponding comparison in at least two of the three trials in which this performance was possible, only two maintained this relationship throughout the other trials and learned the relationships taught. Possible reasons for this behavior are discussed. Study 3 evaluated whether hospitalized elderly subjects, with AD and cognitive impairments, would form equivalence classes from the teaching of arbitrary relationships using a one-to-many training structure, a procedure of delayed hints and teaching by exclusion. Four elderly subjects underwent the teaching of conditional relationships among visual stimuli (written names, photos and names of professions). All learned the relationships taught within the minimum number of programmed blocks, however, they presented difficulty forming equivalence classes and maintaining such relationships in the maintenance tests at five and eight days. The teaching procedures employed were efficient in generating the learning of relationships, however, such learning, in these elderly subjects, did not support the formation and maintenance of equivalence classes.

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