The Anlysis of Verbal Behavior
(1992) 10, 1-10
Joint Control and Generalized Nonidentity Matching:
Saying When Something Is Not
Barry Lowenkron and Vicki Colvin
Abstract
This study investigated how the absence of a specified stimulus
can control behavior. Four children were trained in nonidentity matching,
and as a control, four were trained in identity matching. Both performances
were produced by training overt mediating responses, so that in identity
matching, the selection of a particular comparison was evoked by the repetition
of a sample tact to the comparison, and in nonidentity, by the inability
to repeat the sample tact to the comparison. Successful generalization
of the performances indicated that they were indeed controlled by
these general features rather than by stimulus-specific features.
Comparison selection thus served as an autoclitic report about other verbal
behavior. In particular, generalized nonidentity matching indicates that
sensitivity to discrepancies between what a sample specifies, and what
is actually presented, can be accounted for behaviorally, without recourse
to hypothesized cognitive mediators.
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