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Generalization of delayed identity matching in retarded children.

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TLDR
The technique used in this study was shown to be effective in teaching abstract relations to nonverbal retarded children and to demonstrate particular features of stimulus control sufficient to enable generalized matching.
Abstract
In an extension of prior research, four retarded children were trained under an identity matching-to-sample procedure containing features previously shown to produce controlled generalization to novel stimuli. They first were taught to relate a particular handsign to the sample shape, then to maintain the handsign over a delay interval, and then to select from an array the comparison shape that permitted the handsign to be maintained (i.e., the shape identical to the sample). An initial test revealed little generalization of matching to novel stimuli, but after handsigns were trained to these stimuli, accurate generalized matching appeared immediately. The results replicated prior findings and demonstrated particular features of stimulus control sufficient to enable generalized matching. A behavioral account of relational matching was supported. The technique used in this study was shown to be effective in teaching abstract relations to nonverbal retarded children.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Some logical functions of joint control.

TL;DR: The notion of joint control is presented here, and its ability to provide an interpretative account of these kinds of performances is explored, including relations between words and objects, the specification of objects by words, name-object bidirectionality, and the recognition of objects from their description.
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A Rose by Naming: How We May Learn How to Do It

TL;DR: The isolation of the role of the environment in the emergence of Naming identifies stimuli that were said to be missing in accounts that were critical of Skinner’s (1957) account of verbal behavior.
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Emergence of Naming in Preschoolers: A Comparison of Multiple and Single Exemplar Instruction

TL;DR: The authors compared singular exemplar instruction (SEI) and multiple exemplar instructions (MEI) on emergence of untaught listener and speaker responses (Naming) by preschool children who were missing Naming using combined experimental-control group and nested single-case multiple probe designs.
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Joint control and the generalization of selection-based verbal behavior

TL;DR: This paper showed that joint control is not an alternative to topography-based behavior but depends on its prior development, and that generalized selection-based behaviors are not a substitute for topography based behavior.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Perceptual learning; differentiation or enrichment?

TL;DR: The problem of the role of learning in perception has to do with perception and the effect of past experience or practice on it and the question of whether the authors can learn to do something by perceiving, orWhether they can only learn by doing it.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delayed matching in the pigeon

TL;DR: Pigeons matched a flickering or steady sample by pecking the correspondingly illuminated response key, and this matching behavior was found to depend on the length of the delay intervening between the disappearance of the sample and theBird's choice response, and upon the bird's behavior during the delay interval.
Journal ArticleDOI

Same/different concept learning in the pigeon: the effect of negative instances and prior adaptation to transfer stimuli.

TL;DR: When all birds were transferred to a new task involving colors, nonshifted birds performed significantly better than shifted birds (transferred from matching to oddity, or oddity to matching), but only if they had experienced negative instances of the training concept.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acquisition and transfer of zero-delay matching.

TL;DR: Six birds were trained to match-to-sample with red, green, and blue stimuli on a zero-delay procedure in which the sample stimulus is presented and then removed at the same time the choice stimuli are presented.
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