Equivalence Class Formation in Adults with Severe Behavioral Problems
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Alonso-Vega, Jesús
Froxán Parga, María Xesús
Arntzen, Erik
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Abstract
Stimulus equivalence is a behavioral phenomenon that has been related to complex human behavior (e.g., remembering,
cognitive functioning, and symbolic behavior). As a rule, people diagnosed with severe mental disorders (e.g., schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder) that exhibit delusional and hallucinatory behavior, and disorganized speech have shown cognitive impairment (e.g., processing speed, reasoning/problem solving). Not enough research has analyzed the stimulus equivalence performance in this population. This study aims to investigate the stimulus equivalence performance in adults diagnosed with
severe mental disorders. In particular, this study analyzes the many-to-one (MTO) and one-to-many (OTM) training structures
efects, and the simultaneous (SIM) and the simple-to-complex (STC) training and testing protocol efects on equivalence
class formation in this population. To achieve it, we analyzed the behavior of 18 participants diagnosed with severe mental
disorders in three diferent conditions (Condition 1 OTM/SIM; 2 MTO/SIM; and 3 MTO/STC). Behavior consistent with
stimulus equivalence was found in 11 out of 13 participants who had fnished the study (5 participants decided to leave before
completing the tasks). STC yielded better results than the SIM protocol. No diferences were found between MTO and OTM
training structures. Implications and suggestions for further research have been discussed.
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Bibliographic reference
Alonso-Vega, J., Froxán-Parga, M. X., & Arntzen, E. (2023). Equivalence class formation in adults with severe behavioral problems. The Psychological Record, 73(2), 263-275. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40732-023-00540-6



