Abstract
Two experiments investigated possible interactions between existing equivalence relations among stimuli and the acquisition of simple discriminations involving the same stimuli. During the first phase of Experiment 1, two adult humans learned two sets of six conditional relations among arbitrary visual stimuli designed to produce two independent sets of three, three-member equivalence classes (Set 1 and Set 2). Subjects whose performance met accuracy criteria on tests for equivalence relations proceeded to a second phase in which subjects were taught, via reinforcement, to make the same response to a cluster of three stimuli (e.g., response 1 in the presence of A1, B1, and C1). The clusters of three stimuli were initially consistent with documented equivalence relations for both Set 1 and Set 2 stimuli. In the second half of this phase, the contingencies were realigned such that the simple discriminations being established were consistent with documented equivalence relations for Set 1 stimuli but inconsistent for Set 2 stimuli. Results showed that the simple discriminations were acquired faster for Set 1 stimuli than for Set 2 stimuli. Experiment 2 introduced a third set of stimuli as a control set and systematically replicated Experiment 1 with four subjects. This study found that three of four subjects acquired simple discriminations faster when the cluster of stimuli were drawn from within equivalence classes rather than across equivalence classes. The development of equivalence relations with Set 3 stimuli constrained the utility of the control condition in this experiment. The results are best interpreted as suggesting that existing equivalence relations among stimuli can interact with the development of analytic units such as simple discriminations to either facilitate or retard their development.
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