Research: Basic & Applied

Research: Basic & Applied

The core of the contextual behavioral science (CBS) model of science is work that is inherently translational in nature; basic research informing interventions and vice versa.

Therefore RFT researchers are comprised of basic scientists who possess an interest in RFT’s application to human behavior, or are also clinicians or applied behavior analysts who are interested in understanding clinically-relevant phenomena. As such, RFT principles and processes have been useful for influencing and optimizing performance and functioning across a broad range of human phenomena.

In the Publications section of this website, you will find articles and books about RFT. 

JCBS had a Special Issue on Conceptual Developments in Relational Frame Theory: Research and Practice; Guest Edited by Dermot Barnes-Holmes, Yvonne Barnes-Holmes, Ian Stewart and Thomas Parling

Also, the ACBS community has has a list of research labs all over the world where you might:

  • gain a better understanding of the current lines of research in RFT that is ongoing;
  • network with others doing similar work as yours;
  • foster collaboration between researchers and labs;
  • follow up with researchers on the status of projects.

Please click here to find a comprehensive list of RFT laboratories.

Community

Empirical Support

Empirical Support

This list includes research articles that contain original data relevant to RFT up until 2010. As the number of RFT articles has increased greatly since then, updating this list has become challenging.

For the most up-to-date list, visit the publications database and choose "RFT: Empirical" as a search term. To search for RFT articles by year type in "RFT 2011" or "Relational 2011" on the publications database search.

When logged in, ACBS members can add child pages to update this with new literature -- learn how here.

As of the beginning of 2009, there are about 150 empirical articles that are either on RFT ideas, or very closely related.

2011 - 2021

Hayes, S. C., Law, S., Assemi, K., Falletta-Cowden, N., Shamblin, M., Burleigh, K., Olla, R., Forman, M., & Smith, P. (2021). Relating is an Operant: A Fly Over of 35 Years of RFT Research. Perspectivas Em Análise Do Comportamento, 12(1). DOI: 10.18761/PAC.2021.v12.RFT.02
RFT was first formally described in 1985 and in the 35 years since, hundreds of studies have been conducted on relational learning from an operant point of view. This paper briefly summarizes that history and examines some of its key claims. So far, the empirical program delineated by RFT has held up remarkably well.

O'Connor, M, Farrell, L, Munnelly, A., and McHugh, L. (2017). Citation analysis of relational frame theory: 2009–2016. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science, Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 152-158.
This article contains a list of Empirical RFT articles in the Supplementary material for Empirical RFT articles

2010

Barnes-Holmes, D., Murphy, A., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Stewart, I., (2010). The Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure: Exploring the impact of private versus public contexts and the response latency criterion on pro-white and anti-black stereotyping among white Irish individuals. The Psychological Record, 60, 57-80.

Barnes-Holmes, D., Murtagh, L., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Stewart, I. (2010). Using the Implicit Association Test and the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure to measure attitudes towards meat and vegetables in vegetarians and meat-eaters. The Psychological Record.
One of the first two empirical studies to test the validity of the IRAP by comparing it to the IAT using a "known-groups" approach. The studies also introduce the use of the D-IRAP algorithm.

Cassidy, S., Roche, B., & O’Hora, D. (2010). Relational Frame Theory and human intelligence. European Journal of Behavior Analysis, 11(1), 37-51.
An early conceptual look at the relationship between derived relational responding and intelligence.

Dymond, S., May, R. J., Munnelly, A., & Hoon, A. E. (2010). Evaluating the evidence based for relational frame theory: A citation analysis. The Behavior Analyst, 33, 97-117. 
A total of 174 articls were identified between 1991 and 2008, 62 (36%) of which were empirical and 112 (64%) were nonempirical articles. Further analyses on these articles are conducted.

Dymond, S., & Roche, B. (2010). The impact of derived relational responding on gambling behavior. Analysis of Gambling Behavior, 4, 1-16.

Gore, N. J., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Murphy, G. (2010). The relationship between intellectual functioning and relational perspective-taking. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 10(1), 1-17.

Guinther, P. M., & Dougher, M. J. (2010). Semantic False Memories In The Form Of Derived Relational Intrusions Following Training. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 93(3), 329.

Hinton, E. C., Dymond, S, Von Hecker, U. & Evans, C. J. (2010). Neural correlates of relational reasoning and the symbolic distance effect: Involvement of parietal cortex. Neuroscience, 168, 138-148. 

Hooper, N., Saunders, S., & McHugh, L. (2010). The derived generalization of thought suppression. Learning and Behavior.

Levin, M. E., Hayes, S. C., & Waltz, T. (2010). Creating an implicit measure of cognition more suited to applied research: A test of the Mixed Trial - Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (MT-IRAP). International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 6, 245-261. 

Moran, L., Stewart, I., McElwee, J., & Ming, S. (2010). Brief Report: The Training and Assessment of Relational Precursors and Abilities (TARPA): A Preliminary Analysis. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders.

Munnelly, A., Dymond, S., & Hinton, E. C. (2010). Relational reasoning with derived comparative relations: A novel model of transitive inference. Behavioral Processes, 85, 8-17.

Vahey, N., Boles, S., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2010). Measuring Adolescents' Smoking-related Social Identity Preferences with the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) for the First Time: A Starting Point that Explains Later IRAP Evolutions. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 10, 453-474.

Villatte, M., Monestès, J. L., McHugh, L., Freixa i Baqué, E., & Loas, G. (2010). Adopting the perspective of another in belief attribution: Contribution of Relational Frame Theory to the understanding of impairments in schizophrenia. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 41, 125-134.

Villatte, M., Monestès, J. L., McHugh, L., Freixa i Baqué, E., & Loas, G. (2010). Assessing perspective taking in schizophrenia using Relational Frame Theory. The Psychological Record, 60, 413-424.

2009

Barnes-Holmes, D., Waldron, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Stewart, I. (2009). Testing the validity of the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) and the Implicit Association Test (IAT): Measuring attitudes towards Dublin and country life in Ireland. The Psychological Record, 59, 389-406.
One of the first two empirical studies to test the validity of the IRAP by comparing it to the IAT using a "known-groups" approach. The studies also introduce the use of the D-IRAP algorithm.

Dawson, D. L., Barnes-Holmes, D., Gresswell, D. M., Hart, A. J. P., & Gore, N. J. (2009). Assessing the implicit beliefs of sexual offenders using the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure: A First Study. Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment, 21, 57-75.

Power, P. M., Barnes-Holmes, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Stewart, I. (2009). The Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) as a measure of implicit relative preferences: A first study. The Psychological Record, 59, 621-640.
The first IRAP study that involved using comparative relations as a means of determining implicit relative preferences for different social groups. This was also the first study to show a clear divergence between responses on the IRAP and an explicit measure.

Gross, A. C., & Fox, E. J. (2009). Relational frame theory: An overview of the controversy. The Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 25, 87-98.

Vahey, N. A., Barnes-Holmes, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Stewart, I. (2009). A first test of the Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) as a measure of self-esteem: Irish prisoner groups and university students. The Psychological Record, 59, 371-388.
The first empirical study that aimed to develop a self-esteem IRAP.

Lipkens, G. & Hayes, S. C. (2009). Producing and recognizing analogical relations. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 91, 105-126.
Article shows for the first time that relating relations can be the basis of producing related events, selecting relations, or selecting related events.

Murphy, C. & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2009). Establishing derived manding for specific amounts with three children: An attempt at synthesizing Skinner's verbal behavior and relational frame theory. Psychological Record, 59(1), 75-91.

O'Connor, J., Rafferty, A., Barnes-Holmes, D. & Barnes-Holmes, Y. (2009). The role of verbal behavior, stimulus nameability and familiarity on the equivalence performances of autistic and normally developing children.Psychological Record, 59(10), 53-74.

O'Toole, C., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2009). Three chronometric indices of relational responding as predictors of performance on a brief intelligence test: The importance of relational flexibility. The Psychological Record, 59(1), 119-132.
The first empirical study that used the IRAP to investigate the relationship between relational responding and IQ. Although not reported in the article, the research allowed us to determine that the D-IRAP algorithm appears to control for individual differences in cognitive ability.

2008

Barnes-Holmes, D., Hayden, E., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Stewart, I. (2008). The Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (IRAP) as a response-time and event-related-potentials methodology for testing natural verbal relations: A preliminary study. The Psychological Record, 58, 497-516.
The first empirical study of the IRAP. The article also provides a brief potted history of the research that led to the development of the procedure.

Dymond, S., Roche, B., Forsyth, J.P., Whelan, R. & Rhoden, J. (2008). Derived avoidance learning: Transformation of avoidance response functions in accordance with same and opposite relational frames. The Psychological Record, 58, 269-286.
This interesting study demonstrated that participants will demonstrate avoidance based on the stimulus relations of “same” and “opposite.” Control participants provided evidence that the transformation was a direct product of a relational learning history. Although equivalence may account for the finding, the explanation is circuitous.

Gavin, A., Roche, B., & Ruiz, M. R. (2008). Competing contingencies over derived relational responding: A behavioral model of the implicit association test. The Psychological Record, 58, 427-441.

Ju, W. C. & Hayes, S. C. (2008). Verbal establishing stimuli: Testing the motivative effect of stimuli in a derived relation with consequences. The Psychological Record, 58, 339-363.

McHugh, L., & Reed, P. (2008). Using Relational Frame Theory to build grammar in children with Autistic Spectrum Conditions. The Journal of Speech-Language Pathology and Applied Behavior Analysis, 2.4-3.1, 60-77.

O'Hora, D., Pelaez, M., Barnes-Holmes, D., Rae, G., Robinson, K., & Chaudhary, T. (2008). Temporal relations and intelligence: Correlating relational performance with performance on the WAIS-III. The Psychological Record, 58, 569-584.

Pérez-González, L.A., Herszlikowicz, K. & Williams, G. (2008). Stimulus relations analysis and the emergence of novel intraverbals. Psychological Record, 58, 95-129.

Roche, B. T., Kanter, J. W., Brown, K. R., Dymond, S., & Fogarty, C. C. (2008). A comparison of "direct" versus "derived" extinction of avoidance responding. The Psychological Record, 58, 443-464.

Roche, B. & Dymond, S. (2008). A transformation of functions in accordance with the nonarbitrary relational properties of sexual stimuli. Psychological Record, 58, 71-94.

Vitale, A., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Campbell, C. (2008). Facilitating responding in accordance with the relational frame of comparison: Systematic empirical analyses. The Psychological Record, 58, 365-390.

Weinstein, J. H., Wilson, K. G., Drake, C. E., & Kellum, K. K. (2008). A Relational Frame Theory Contribution to Social Categorization. Behavior and Social Issues, 17, 39-64.

2007

Berens, N. M., & Hayes, S. C. (2007). Arbitrarily applicable comparative relations: Experimental Evidence for relational operants. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 40, 45-71.
In a combined multiple baseline (across responses and participants) and multiple probe design (with trained and untrained stimuli), it was shown that reinforced multiple exemplar training facilitated the development of arbitrary comparative relations, and that these skills generalized not just across stimuli but also across trial types.

Cahill, J., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Barnes-Holmes, D., Rodríguez-Valverde, M., Luciano, C., & Smeets, P. M. (2007). The derived transfer and reversal of mood functions through equivalence relations II. The Psychological Record, 57, 373-389.

Dougher, M. J., Hamilton, D., Fink, B., & Harrington, J. (2007). Transformation of the discriminative and eliciting functions of generalized relational stimuli. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 88(2), 179-197.
Transformation of respondent stimulus functions via more-than/less-than direct and derived relations.

Gómez, S., López, F., Martín, C.B., Barnes-Holmes, Y. & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2007). Exemplar training and a derived transformation of functions in accordance with symmetry and equivalence. Psychological Record, 57(2), 273-294.
This is a very straightforward study programming transformation of function with young children. The first experiment simply exposed four children to action-object exemplar training and tested for symmetry. Experiment two enhanced transformation via multiple exemplar training; effectively demonstrating the ability to program stimulus relations via exemplar training.

Gaynor, S. T., Washio, Y. & Anderson, F. (2007). The conjunction fallacy: A derived stimulus relations conceptualization and demonstration experiment. The Psychological Record, 57, 63-85.

Luciano, M. C., Gómez, I., & Rodríguez, M. (2007). The Role of Multiple-Exemplar Training and Naming in Establishing Derived Equivalence in an Infant. Journal of Experimental Analysis of Behavior.

McHugh, L., Barnes-Holmes, Y. & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2007). Deictic relational complexity and the development of deception. Psychological Record, 57(4), 517-531.

McHugh, L., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Barnes-Holmes, D., Whelan, R. & Stewart, I. (2007). Knowing me, knowing you: Deictic complexity in false-belief understanding. Psychological Record, 57(4), 533-542.

McKenna, I. M., Barnes-Holmes, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Stewart, I. (2007). Testing the fake-ability of the implicit relational assessment procedure (IRAP): the first study. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, (7)2, 123-138.
The first empirical study that sought to determine if the IRAP can be readily faked.

O'Toole, C., Barnes-Holmes, D. & Smyth, S. (2007). A derived transfer of functions and the Implicit Association Test.Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 88(2), 263-283.

Rehfeldt, R., Dillen, J. E., Ziomek, M. M. & Kowalchuk, R. K. (2007). Assessing Relational Learning Deficits in Perspective-Taking in Children with High Functioning Autism Spectrum Disorder. The Psychological Record, 57, 23-47.

Rosales, R. & Rehfeldt, R.A. (2007). Contriving transitive conditioned establishing operations to establish derived manding skills in adults with severe developmental disabilities. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 40(1), 105-121.

Schlund, M.W., Hoehn-Saric, R. & Cataldo, M.F. (2007). New knowledge derived from learned knowledge: Functional-anatomic correlates of stimulus equivalence. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 87(2), 287-307.

2006

Barnes-Holmes, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Power, P., Hayden, E., Milne, R., & Stewart, I. (2006). Do you really know what you believe? developing the implicit relational assessment procedure (IRAP) as a direct measure of implicit beliefs. The Irish Psychologist, (32)7, 169-177.

Dixon, M.R., Rehfeldt, R.A., Zlomke, K.R. & Robinson, A. (2006). Exploring the development and dismantling of equivalence classes involving terrorist stimuli. Psychological Record, 56, 83-103.
This paper describes 2 studies that present a conceptual interpretation and experimental findings involving developing and dismantling of equivalence classes consisting of terrorist stimuli. Results of experiment 1 showed that participants made predictable responses to stimuli during pretest, however made fewer culturally controlled responses after training. Experiment 2 showed that it was easy to acquire relations involving terrorist stimuli when compared to two other conditions. Implications are discussed.

Dixon, M. R., Zlomke, K. M., & Rehfeldt, R. A. (2006). Restoring Americans’ Nonequivalent Frames of Terror: An Application of Relational Frame Theory. The Behavior Analyst Today, 7(3), 275-289.

Haas, J. R., & Hayes, S.C. (2006). When knowing you are doing well hinders performance: Exploring the interaction between rules and feedback. Journal of Organizational Behavior Management, 26, 91-111.
The effect of two types of verbal consequences, rule-following feedback and task performance feedback, on rule-induced insensitivity to programmed schedules of reinforcement were examined. Rule-following feedback could be either accurate or non-contingently positive. The task involved moving a sign through a grid using telegraph keys operating on a multiple DRL 6/FR 18 schedule of reinforcement in the presence of an initially accurate rule. After acquisition, the multiple schedule was changed without notice to a FR 1/FI Yoked schedule. Accurate rule-following feedback plus feedback on task performance produced striking insensitivity to the DRL 6 to FR 1 schedule change, the opposite of what might be expected by a common sense analysis of task performance feedback, even after controlling for contact with the changed contingency. It is argued that findings such as these can only be understood by considering the mutual verbal relations evoked by the combinations of rules and feedback, rather than treating feedback as a simple consequential event or as a verbal consequence whose effects do not depend on the relations sustained with other events.

McHugh, L., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Barnes-Holmes, D. & Stewart, I. (2006). Understanding false belief as generalized operant behavior. Psychological Record, 56(3), 341-364.

Ninness, C., Barnes-Holmes, D., Rumph, R., McCuller, G., Ford, A. M., Payne, R., et al. (2006). Transformations of mathematical and stimulus functions. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 39, 299-321.

Smeets, P. M., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Striefel, S. (2006). Establishing and reversing equivalence relations with precursor to the relational evaluation procedure. The Psychological Record, 56(2), 267-286.

Smyth, S., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Forsyth, J. P. (2006). A derived transfer of simple discrimination and self-reported arousal functions in spider fearful and non-spider fearful participants. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 85(2), 223-246.
This article used the stimulus paring observation procedure to demonstrate transformation of arousal functions, and provided further evidence that anxiety responses can participate in arbitrary relational frames and produce problematic clinical outcomes.

Valdivia, S., Luciano, C., & Molina, F. J. (2006). Verbal regulation of motivational states. The Psychological Record, 56, 577-595.

Whelan, R., Barnes-Holmes, D. & Dymond, S. (2006). The transformation of consequential functions in accordance with the relational frames of more-than and less-than. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 86(3), 317-335.

2005

Barnes-Holmes, D., Regan, D., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Commins, S., Walsh, D., Stewart, I., et al. (2005). Relating derived relations as a model of analogical reasoning: reaction times and event-related potentials. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 84(3), 435-451.
This study used event related potentials to test the RFT prediction that same-same relations are simpler and functionally distinct different-different analogical reasoning. Reaction times were significantly longer, and waveforms were significantly more negative for different-different than they were for same-same relations. This is consistent with the prediction based on RFT.

Dixon, M.R. & Zlomke, K.M. (2005). Implementación del precursor del procedimiento de evaluación relacional en el establecimiento de marcos relacionales de igualdad, oposición y diferencia. = Using the precursor to the relational evaluation procedure (PREP) to establish the relational frames of sameness, opposition, and distinction. Revista Latinoamericana de Psicología, 37(2), 305-316.

Gutiérrez-Martí¬nez, O., Luciano-Soriano, M. C., & Valdivia, S. (2005). Change of self-efficacy verbalizations and derivation of functions. Psicothema, 17, 625-630.

Merwin, R.M. & Wilson, Kelly G. (2005). Preliminary findings on the effects of self-referring and evaluative stimuli on stimulus equivalence class formation. Psychological Record, 55, 561-575.

Murphy, C., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Barnes-Holmes, Y. (2005). Derived manding in children with autism: Synthesizing Skinner's verbal behavior with relational frame theory. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 38(4), 445-462.

Ninness, C., Rumph, R., McCuller, G., Harrison, C., Ford, A. M., & Ninness, S. K. (2005). A functional analytic approach to computer-interactive mathematics. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 38 , 1-22.
One of the first uses of RFT in higher education. Here is the abstract: Following a pretest, 11 participants who were naive with regard to various algebraic and trigonometric transformations received an introductory lecture regarding the fundamentals of the rectangular coordinate system. Following the lecture, they took part in a computer-interactive matching-to-sample procedure in which they received training on particular formula-to-formula and formula-to-graph relations as these formulas pertain to reflections and vertical and horizontal shifts. In training A-B, standard formulas served as samples and factored formulas served as comparisons. In training B-C, factored formulas served as samples and graphs served as comparisons. Subsequently, the program assessed for mutually entailed B-A and C-B relations as well as combinatorially entailed C-A and A-C relations. After all participants demonstrated mutual entailment and combinatorial entailment, we employed a test of novel relations to assess 40 different and complex variations of the original training formulas and their respective graphs. Six of 10 participants who completed training demonstrated perfect or near-perfect performance in identifying novel formula-to-graph relations. Three of the 4 participants who made more than three incorrect responses during the assessment of novel relations showed some commonality among their error patterns. Derived transfer of stimulus control using mathematical relations is discussed.

Ninness, C., Rumph, R., McCuller, G., Vasquez III, E., Harrison, C., Ford, A.M., et al. (2005b). A relational frame and artificial neural network approach to computer-interactive mathematics. Psychological Record, 55, 135-153.

O'Hora, D., Â Pelaez, M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2005). Derived relational responding and performance on verbal subtests of the WAIS-III. The Psychological Record, 55(1), 155-175.

Rehfeldt, R.A. & Dymond, S. (2005). The effects of test order and nodal distance on the emergence and stability of derived discriminative stimulus functions. Psychological Record, 55(2), 179-196.

Rehfeldt, R. A. & Root, S. L. (2005). Establishing derived requesting skills in adults with severe developmental disabilities. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 38, 101-105.

Reilly, T., Whelan, R., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2005). The effect of training structure on the latency responses to a five-term linear chain. The Psychological Record, 55(2), 233-249.

Smeets, P.M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2005a). Auditory-visual and visual-visual equivalence relations in children. The Psychological Record, 55(3), 483-503.

Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes D. (2005b). Establishing equivalence classes in preschool children with many-to-one and one-to-many training protocols. Behavioural Processes, 69(3), 281-293.

Whelan, R., Cullinan, V. & O'Donovan, A. (2005). Derived same and opposite relations produce association and mediated priming. = Mismas Relaciones derivadas y Opuestas Producen la Asociación y la Preparación Mediada.International Journal of Psychology & Psychological Therapy, 5(3), 247-264.

2004

Barnes-Holmes, Y., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P. M. (2004). Establishing relational responding in accordance with opposite as generalized operant behavior in young children. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4, 559-586.

Barnes-Holmes, Y., Barnes-Holmes, D., Smeets, P. M., & Luciano, C. (2004). The derived transfer of mood functions through equivalence relations. The Psychological Record, 54, 95-114.

Barnes-Holmes, Y., Barnes-Holmes, D., Smeets, P. M., Strand, P., & Friman, P. (2004). Establishing relational responding in accordance with more-than and less-than as generalized operant behavior in young children.International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4, 531-558.

Barnes-Holmes, D., Staunton, C., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Whelan, R., Stewart, I., Commins, S., et al. (2004). Interfacing Relational Frame Theory with cognitive neuroscience: Semantic priming, The Implicit Association Test, and event related potentials. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4, 215-240.

Carpentier, F., Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2004). Equivalence-equivalence: Matching stimuli with same discriminative functions. The Psychological Record, 54, 145-162.

Carpentier, F., Smeets, P. M., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Stewart, I. (2004). Matching derived functionally-same relations: Equivalence-equivalence and classical analogies. The Psychological Record, 54, 255-273.

McHugh, L., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2004). Perspective-taking as relational responding: A developmental profile. The Psychological Record, 54, 115-144.

This article describes traditional tasks that relate to what developmental literature calls “Theory of Mind. ” Its goals were to develop and test a protocol across groups in several different developmental stages (young children through adulthood) that indicated that perspective taking could be described in terms of relational responding (arbitrarily applicable, mutually entailed, combinatorily entailed, and showing transformation of stimulus function) and that added but did not contradict the traditional and developmental literature. Study 1 tested the protocol, Study 2 tested whether young children’s poor response was an artifact of word length, and Study 3 tested whether the experimenter’s cues affected responding. Results from three studies indicated indeed that perspective taking can be viewed as an operant, and that deictic frames across three levels of complexity were functionally distinct classes of behavior. A developmental profile emerged, showing that derived relational responding develops with age as well as relational complexity. Further, I-YOU relations emerge before HERE-THERE and NOW-THEN relations, and NOW-THEN relations produced the most errors in all participants regardless of age.

O'Hora, D., Barnes-Holmes, D., Roche, B., & Smeets, P. M. (2004). Derived relational networks and control by novel instructions: A possible model of generative verbal responding. The Psychological Record, 54, 437-460.
Results from two studies examining instructional control on novel stimulus situations are described. The researchers employed the Relational Evaluation Procedure to train relations and then tested these in novel situations. Results support the idea that novel instructions can control behavior and that RFT provides an adequate model for the generativity of language.

Roche, B., Linehan, C., Ward, T., Dymond, S., & Rehfeldt, R. (2004). The Unfolding of the Relational Operant: A Real-time Analysis Using Electroencephalography and Reaction Time Measures. International Journal of Psychology & Psychological Therapy, 4(3), 587-603.

Valverde, M., Luciano, M. C., Gutiérrez Martí nez, O., & Hernández López, M. (2004). Tranfer of latent inhibition of aversively conditioned autonomic responses through equivalence classes. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4, 605-622.

Stewart, I., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Roche, B. (2004). A functional-analytic model of analogy using the relational evaluation procedure. The Psychological Record, 54, 531-552.
This study provides an empirical demonstration of analogy using the Relational Evaluation Procedure (REP), a recently developed technique for the rapid training and testing of derived stimulus relations. The experiment involved 9 stages in which 5 adult male subjects were exposed to a complex series of REP training and testing protocols, by the end of which they each readily demonstrated 24 completely novel instances of responding in accordance with analogical relations as conceptualized by RFT.

Smeets, P. M., van Wijngaarden, M., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Cullinan, V. (2004). Assessing stimulus equivalence with a precursor to the relational evaluation procedure. Behavioural Processes, 65, 241-251.

Whelan, R., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2004a). The transformation of consequential functions in accordance with the relational frames of same and opposite. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 82, 177-195.
Formative augmenting, behavior due to relational networks that establish given consequences as reinforcers or as punishers, was demonstrated in accordance with Same and Opposite relational networks. Some stimuli acquired reinforcing functions, based on the derived relation of Opposite, although in some cases no such function had actually been established for any member of the network. These effects were also observed across ABA reversals in the baseline contingencies.

Whelan, R., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2004b). Empirical models of formative augmenting in accordance with the relations of same, opposite, more-than, and less-than. International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy, 4, 285-302.
Authors demonstrated through two experiments that stimuli acquired reinforcing functions based on derived relational networks. This research supports the idea of formative augmenting: the degree to which events function as consequences was altered based on relational networks of Same and Opposite and more-than and less-than.

2003

Carpentier, F., Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2003a). Equivalence-equivalence as a model of analogy: Further analyses. The Psychological Record, 53, 349-372.
This study attempted to train equivalence-equivalence relations with 5-year-old children. Only 8 of 18 showed equivalence-equivalence relations when tested. The procedure was then tested with adults and was successful with all of them.

Carpentier, F., Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2003b). Matching unrelated stimuli with same discriminative functions: Training order effects. Behavioural Processes, 60, 215-226.

Carr, D. (2003). Effects of exemplar training in exclusion responding on auditory-visual discrimination tasks with children with autism. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 36, 507-524.
Showed that multiple-exemplar training with auditory-visual exclusion tasks facilitated nonreinforced exclusion performances which reduced error rates on subsequent novel stimulus sets.

Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2003). Children's emergent preferences for soft drinks: Stimulus-equivalence and transfer. Journal of Economic Psychology, 24, 603-618.

Smeets, P. M., Barnes-Holmes, Y., Akpinar, D. & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2003). Reversal of equivalence relations. The Psychological Record, 53, 91-120.

2002

Carpentier, F., Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2002a). Establishing transfer of compound control in children: A stimulus control analysis. The Psychological Record, 52, 139-158.

Carpentier, F., Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2002b). Matching functionally-same relations: Implications for equivalence-equivalence as a model for analogical reasoning. The Psychological Record, 52, 351-312.
This study tested equivalence-equivalence and nonequivalence-nonequivalence relations with adults, 9-year-olds, and 5-year-olds. Most of the adults and 9-year-olds demonstrated these relations, but the 5-year-olds did not.

Dougher, M., Perkins, D. R., Greenway, D., Koons, A., & Chiasson, C. (2002). Contextual control of equivalence-based transformation of functions. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 78, 63-94.
Transformation of functions among members in equivalence classes

Gomez, S., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Luciano, M. C. (2002). Generalized break equivalence II: Contextual control over a generalized pattern of stimulus relations. The Psychological Record, 52, 203-220.
Building on the work of Gomez et al (1999; 2001), the authors established effective contextual control over the Generalised Break Equivalence Pattern (GBEP) which provides further support for the generalized operant nature of derived relational responding.

Luciano, C., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2002). Establishing reports of saying and doing and discriminations of say-do relations. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 23, 406-421.

Markham, M.R., Dougher, M.J. & Augustson, E.M. (2002). Transfer of operant discrimination and respondent elicitation via emergent relations of compound stimuli. Psychological Record, 52(3), 325-350.

O'Hora, D., Roche, B., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P. (2002). Response latencies to multiple derived stimulus relations: Testing two predictions of Relational Frame Theory. The Psychological Record, 52, 51-75.
The authors measured response latencies to mutually entailed same, opposite, more-than, and less-than relations. Response latencies to same and opposite relations were significantly faster than more-than and less-than relations. A second experiment showed a gradual decrease in response latency for more/less relations across a novel stimulus set.

Stewart, I., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Roche, B., & Smeets, P. M. (2002a). Stimulus equivalence and non-arbitrary relations. The Psychological Record, 52, 77-88

Stewart, I., Barnes-Holmes, D., Roche, B., & Smeets, P. M. (2002b). A functional-analytic model of analogy: A relational frame analysis. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 78, 375-396.
This study explored a behavior-analytic model of analogical reasoning, defined as the discrimination of formal similarity via equivalence-equivalence responding. Equivalence classes were trained, and subjects responded according to equivalence-equivalence relations. Subjects discriminated by shape or color of a relata. Transformation of stimulus functions of a block-sorting task based on this model of analogy was also shown.

2001

Barnes-Holmes, Y. Barnes-Holmes, D. Roche, B, & Smeets, P. M. (2001a). Exemplar training and a derived transformation of function in accordance with symmetry: I. The Psychological Record, 51, 287- 308.
This paper demonstrates that multiple exemplar training provides the necessary history to establish transformation across symmetry relations. Four studies confirmed that after relatively few exemplar training sessions, transformation could occur even across response modalities.

Barnes-Holmes, Y. Barnes-Holmes, D. Roche, B, & Smeets, P. M. (2001b). Exemplar training and a derived transformation of function in accordance with symmetry II. The Psychological Record, 51, 589-603.
This study clears some questions raised by Part I. Specifically, the authors found that naming is not a critical component of transformation, and children could readily demonstrate transformed functions in accordance with symmetry with no history of naming. The third part of the study examined the effects of pre-training. Results suggest that pre-training may be effective, but if not, to forgo additional pre-training and move immediately to multiple exemplar training.

Cullinan, V. A., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P. M. (2001). A precursor to the relational evaluation procedure: Searching for the contextual cues that control equivalence responding. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 76, 339-349.

Fitzgerald, D. L. (2001). The effects of fluency in the acquisition of conditional, symmetric, and equivalence relations on the emergence of derived relational responding and the contextual control of relational behavior. Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering, 61(9-B).

Gomez, S., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Luciano, M. C. (2001). Generalized break equivalence I. The Psychological Record, 51, 131-150.
The objective of this study was to produce responding in accordance with symmetry and transitivity but not with equivalence across novel stimulus sets. Building on the work of Gomez et al (1999), the authors employed several new procedures to generate ‘broken’ equivalence relations which provides support for the generalized operant nature of derived relational responding.

Leader, G., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2001). Establishing fraction-decimal equivalence using a respondent-type training procedure. The Psychological Record, 51, 151-166.

Leader, G., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2001). Matching-to-sample and respondent-type training as methods for producing equivalence relations: Isolating the critical variable. The Psychological Record, 51, 429-444.

Luciano, M. C., Herruzo, J., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2001). Generalization of say-do correspondence. The Psychological Record, 51, 111-130.

Lyddy, F., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Hampson, P. J. (2001). A transfer of sequence function via equivalence in a connectionist network. The Psychological Record, 51, 409-428.

O'Hora, D., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Roche, B. (2001). Developing a procedure to model the establishment of instructional control. Experimental Analysis of Behavior Bulletin, 19, 13-15.
The authors measured response latencies to mutually entailed same, opposite, more-than, and less-than relations. Response latencies to same and opposite relations were significantly faster than more-than and less-than relations. A second experiment showed a gradual decrease in response latency for more/less relations across a novel stimulus set.]

Smeets, P. M., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Roche, B. (2001). Derived stimulus-response and stimulus-stimulus relations in children and adults: Assessing training order effects. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 78, 130-154.

Osborne, J.G. & Koppel, L. (2001). Acquisition, generalization, and contextual control of taxonomic and thematic relational responding. Psychological Record, 51(2), 185-205.

Stewart, I., Barnes-Holmes, D., Roche, B., & Smeets, P. M. (2001). Generating derived relational networks via the abstraction of common physical properties: A possible model of analogical reasoning. The Psychological Record, 51, 381-408.
This study demonstrated equivalence-equivalence responding based on the abstraction of common formal properties.

2000

Augustson, E.M., Dougher, M.J. & Markham, M.R. (2000). Emergence of conditional stimulus relations and transfer of respondent eliciting functions among compound stimuli. Psychological Record, 50(4), 745-770.
Transfer of respondent eliciting functions occurs even among compound stimuli.

Barnes-Holmes, D., Keane, J., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & Smeets, P. M. (2000). A derived transformation of emotive functions as a means of establishing differential preferences for soft drinks. The Psychological Record, 50, 493-511.

Carpentier, F., Smeets, P. M., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2000). Matching compound samples with unitary compounds: Derived stimulus relations in adults and children. The Psychological Record, 50, 671-686.

Carr, D., Wilkinson, K. M., Blackman, D., & McIlvane, W. J. (2000). Equivalence classes in individuals with minimal verbal repertoires. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 74, 101-115.

Cullinan, V. A., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P. M. (2000). A precursor to the relational evaluation procedure. II.The Psychological Record, 50, 467-492.

Healy, O., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P.M. (2000). Derived relational responding as generalised operant behaviour. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behaviour, 74, 207-227.
Demonstrated that response patterns on novel stimulus sets was controlled by the feedback delivered for previous stimulus sets.

Leader, G., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P. M. (2000). Establishing equivalence relations using a respondent-type training procedure III. The Psychological Record, 50, 63-78.
Similar to the study above but with young children as subjects.

Roche, B., Barnes-Holmes, D., Smeets, P. M., Barnes-Holmes, Y., & McGeady, S. (2000). Contextual control over the derived transformation of discriminative and sexual arousal functions. The Psychological Record, 50, 267-291.
Following on from Roche and Barnes (1997) and McGeady and Roche (1997), the authors demonstrate four distinct contextually-controlled transformations of function by presenting the contextual cue along with the derived stimuli. Skin resistance responses and operant discriminations are measured. Still the only study to employ such a testing format.

Smeets, P.M., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Cullinan, V. (2000). Establishing equivalence classes with match-to-sample format and simultaneous-discrimination format conditional discrimination tasks. The Psychological Record, 50, 721-744.

Smeets, P. M., Dymond, S., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2000). Instructions, stimulus equivalence, and stimulus sorting: Effects of sequential testing arrangements and a default option. The Psychological Record, 50, 339-354.

1999

Gomez, S., Huerta, F., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Luciano, C. (1999). Breaking equivalence relations. Experimental Analysis of Human Behavior Bulletin, 17, 1-4.
The objective of this study was to produce responding in accordance with symmetry and transitivity but not with equivalence, across novel stimulus sets.

Smeets, P. M., Barnes, D., & Luciano, C. M. (1999). Reversal of emergent simple discrimination in children: A component analysis. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 60(3), 327-343.

1998

Cullinan, V. A., Barnes, D., & Smeets, P. M. (1998). A precursor to the relational evaluation procedure: Analyzing stimulus equivalence.The Psychological Record, 48, 121-145.

Dymond S. & Barnes D. (1998). The effects of prior equivalence testing and verbal instructions on derived self-discrimination transfer: A follow-up study. Psychological Record 48(1), 147-170.
A follow-up study to Dymond & Barnes (1994). Subjects were not given equivalence training this time but were instead trained in a series of conditional discriminations. Also, some subjects were given extensive instructions and others were given minimal instructions. Neither of these factors affected the subjects performance and the results from previous experiments were replicated.

Hayes, S. C., & Bissett, R. (1998). Derived stimulus relations produce mediated and episodic priming. The Psychological Record, 48, 617-630.
Showed that priming effects that are well known in semantically related words also occurred in nonsense stimuli related through equivalence.

Healy, O., Barnes-Holmes, D., & Smeets, P.M. (1998). Derived relational responding as an operant: The effects of between-session feedback. The Psychological Record, 48, 511-536.
Delivering accurate or inaccurate feedback to subjects following a test for derived equivalence relations produces responding on subsequent tests that is consistent with that feedback. One of the first to demonstrate the operant nature of relation responding.

1997

Barnes, D., Hegarty, N., & Smeets, P. M. (1997). Relating equivalence relations to equivalence relations: A relational framing model of complex human functioning. The Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 14, 57-83.
This study examined the RFT approach to analogical reasoning. Subjects were trained on several equivalence relations. They were then shown pairs of relata in which both of the relata were from the same relation or in which both relata were from different relations. The subjects successfully matched pairs of same with same and different with different.

McGeady, S. & Roche, B. (1997). A contextually controlled transformation of operant response functions in accordance with arbitrarily applicable relations. Experimental Analysis of Human Behavior Bulletin, 15, 12-13.

Roche, B., & Barnes, D. (1997). A transformation of respondently conditioned sexual arousal functions in accordance with arbitrary relations. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 67, 275-301.
The first study to show a transformation of respondently conditioned sexual arousal functions, measured as skin resistance responses, through same and opposite relations. An excellent demonstration of how to conduct complex electrodermal research within an RFT framework.

Roche, B., Barnes, D., & Smeets, P. M. (1997). Incongruous stimulus pairing and conditional discrimination training: Effects on relational responding. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 68, 143-160.

Smeets, P., & Barnes, D. (1997). Emergent conditional discrimination in children and adults: Stimulus equivalence derived from simple discriminations. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 66, 64-84.

Smeets, P., Barnes, D., & Roche, B. (1997). Functional equivalence in children. Derived stimulus-response and stimulus-stimulus relations. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 66, 1-17.

Smeets, P.M., Leader, G., & Barnes, D. (1997). Establishing stimulus classes with adults and children using a respondent training procedure: A follow-up study. The Psychological Record, 47, 285-308.

1996

Barnes, D., Lawlor, H., Smeets, P. M., & Roche, B. (1996). Stimulus equivalence and academic self-concept in mildly mentally handicapped and non-mentally handicapped children. The Psychological Record, 46, 87-107.
Using educationally-relevant real world stimuli such as "slow" and "able" as well as the subject's own name, the authors show how developmentally-delayed children come to fail tests for equivalence when the predicted outcome is in contrast to their learning history. That is, subjects did not relate their own name to "able." A neat study on prior-learning effects in equivalence formation.

Dymond, S. & Barnes, D. (1996). A transformation of self-discrimination response functions in accordance with the arbitrarily applicable relations of sameness and opposition. The Psychological Record, 46, 271-300.
Demonstrates a transformation of functions in accordance with sameness and opposition, using several matching-to-sample control tasks to prevent formation of simple equivalence and nonequivalence relations.

Grey, I., & Barnes, D. (1996). Stimulus equivalence and attitudes. The Psychological Record, 46, 243-270.

Leader, G., Barnes, D., & Smeets, P.M. (1996). Establishing equivalence relations using a respondent-type training procedure. The Psychological Record, 46, 685-706.
The first in a series of studies investigating a new procedure for the derivation of equivalence relations. “Training” merely involves observing on-screen presentations of stimulus pairs and then testing for equivalence using a match-to-sample format. More effective in establishing equivalence than standard MTS arrangements.

Roche, B., & Barnes, D. (1996). Arbitrarily applicable relational responding and sexual categorization: A critical test of the difference relation. The Psychological Record, 46, 451-475.
After Steele & Hayes, the first study to systematically examine the relational frame of distinction using socially-loaded stimuli. This study inspired a series of exchanges between the authors and Richard Saunders in the same volume on the relationship between equivalence and RFT.

Smeets, P., Barnes, D., & Schenk, J., & Darcheville, J., (1996). Emergent simple discriminations and conditional relations in children, adults with mental retardation, and normal adults. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 49(B), 201-219.

Wilson, K. G. & Hayes, S. C. (1996). Resurgence of derived stimulus relations. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 66, 267-281.

1995

Barnes, D., Browne, M., Smeets, P., & Roche, B. (1995). A transfer of functions and a conditional transfer of functions through equivalence relations in three- to six-year-old children. The Psychological Record, 45, 405-430.
Transfer and contextually-controlled transfer in kids of different ages with the older subjects passing the more complex tests. A nice example of a nonautomated transfer study.

Dymond, S. & Barnes, D. (1995). A transformation of self-discrimination response functions in accordance with the arbitrarily applicable relations of sameness, more-than, and less-than. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 64, 163-184. Erratum, 66, 348.
The first study to show three patterns of derived relational responding in accordance with sameness, more-than, and less-than. Alternative explanations for the transformation test outcomes are considered and found wanting. The relational network figure has been reproduced in several different publications

Smeets, P. M., & Barnes, D. (1995). Emergent simple discrimination via transfer from differentially reinforced S+ stimuli: A further test of the stimulus-response interaction model. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 48B(4), 329-345.

Smeets, P., Barnes, D., & Luciano, C. (1995). Total reversal of emergent simple discrimination in children: A component analysis. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 60, 327-343.

Smeets, P., Schenk, J., & Barnes, D. (1995). Establishing arbitrary stimulus classes via identity matching training and non-reinforced matching with complex stimuli. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 48B(4), 311-328.

1994

Barnes, D. (1994). Stimulus equivalence and relational frame theory. The Psychological Record, 44, 91-124.
A cogent introduction to RFT in which the author compares "Sidman equivalence" with RFT, offers a respondent analysis of symmetry, and predicts various outcomes of training designs. Good for an undergraduate introduction to the area

Cullinan, V., Barnes, D., Hampson, P. J., & Lyddy, F. (1994). A transfer of explicitly and nonexplicitly trained sequence responses through equivalence relations: An experimental demonstration and connectionist model. The Psychological Record, 44, 559-585.

Dougher, M. J., Augustson, E., Markham, M. R., Greenway, D. E., & Wulfert, E. (1994). The transfer of respondent eliciting and extinction functions through stimulus equivalence classes. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 62, 331-351.
One of the early articles studying the transfer of respondent eliciting functions.

Dymond, S., & Barnes, D. (1994). A transfer of self-discrimination response functions through equivalence relations.Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 62, 251-267.
Four subjects were trained in matching-to-sample tasks and equivalence relations. They showed the expected transfer of self-discrimination response functions. Four control subjects either received training in matching to sample but were not tested on equivalence or were trained and tested using stimuli not used in the transfer test. None of these showed the transfer of self-discrimination response functions.

Hayes, L. J., Brenner, K., & Hayes, S. C. (1994). Assessing pre-existing stimulus relations via stimulus equivalence.Mexican Journal of Behavior Analysis, 20, 146-166.

1993

Barnes, D., & Hampson, P. (1993). Stimulus equivalence and connectionism: Implications for behavior analysis and cognitive science. The Psychological Record, 43, 617-638.

Barnes, D., & Keenan, M. (1993). A transfer of functions through derived arbitrary and non-arbitrary stimulus relations. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 59, 61-81.
An elegant demonstration of transfer of functions through equivalence relations, with and without a prior equivalence test, and a generalised transfer through non-arbitrary relations. One of the most-cited transfer articles.

Lipkens, R., Hayes, S. C., & Hayes, L. J. (1993). Longitudinal study of the development of derived relations in an infant. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 56, 201-239.
Showed the development of derived stimulus relations, including equivalence and exclusion, in a human infant.

Schusterman, R. J. & Kastak, D. (1993). A California sea lion (Zalophus californianus) is capable of forming equivalence relations. The Psychological Record, 43, 823-840.

Zentall, T. R., & Urcuioli, P. J. (1993). Emergent relations in the formation of stimulus classes in pigeons. The Psychological Record, 43, 795-810.

1991

Hayes, S. C., Kohlenberg, B. K., & Hayes, L. J. (1991). The transfer of specific and general consequential functions through simple and conditional equivalence classes. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 56,119-137.
Showed the transfer of consequential functions through equivalence relations, both simple and conditional.

Kohlenberg, B. S., Hayes, S. C., & Hayes, L. J. (1991). The transfer of contextual control over equivalence classes through equivalence classes: A possible model of social stereotyping. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 56, 505-518.
Showed that transfer effects extended to conditional stimuli that themselves regulated derived relational responding. Extends the analysis to social stereotyping

Steele, D., & Hayes, S. C. (1991). Stimulus equivalence and arbitrarily applicable relational responding. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 56, 519-555.
The first experimental demonstration that establishing cues that controlled non-arbitrary stimulus relations later produced multiple forms of derived relational responding with arbitrary stimulus sets. One of the first clear experimental demonstrations of RFT.

Watt, A., Keenan, M., Barnes, D., & Cairns, E. (1991). Social categorization and stimulus equivalence. The Psychological Record, 41, 33-50.
This study examined whether social categorization could be explored in terms of stimulus equivalence by testing whether equivalence training could be transferred to untrained social stimuli. The study had Irish Protestants, Irish Catholics and English Protestants go through a series of matching-to-sample procedures in which they were trained to match Protestant or Catholic stimuli with non-sense syllables. The findings suggest that previous learning might interfere with equivalence responding in the experimental training.

1990 and earlier

Barnes, D., McCullagh, P. D., & Keenan, M. (1990). Equivalence class formation in non-hearing impaired children and hearing impaired children. The Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 8, 19-30.

Hayes, L. J., Thompson, S., & Hayes, S. C. (1989). Stimulus equivalence and rule following. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 52, 275-291.
Authors describe results of two studies attempting to specify the relationship between verbal and nonverbal behavior in the context of rule following. Two stimulus equivalence relationships were trained and then subjects were tested for production of novel behavior. Novel behavior was produced in both the presence and absence of names provided for the equivalence classes.

De Rose, J. C., McIlvane, W. J., Dube, W. V., Galpin, V. C., & Stoddard, L. T. (1988). Emergent simple discrimination established by indirect relation to differential consequences. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 50, 1-20.
One of the early articles studying the transfer of stimulus functions among members in equivalent classes.

Wulfert, E., & Hayes, S. C. (1988). Transfer of a conditional ordering response through conditional equivalence classes. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 50, 125-144.

Hayes, S. C., Brownstein, A. J., Devany, J. M., Kohlenberg, B. S., & Shelby, J. (1987). Stimulus equivalence and the symbolic control of behavior. Mexican Journal of Behavior Analysis, 13, 361-374.
Showed the transfer of discriminative functions through equivalence relations

Devany, J. M., Hayes, S. C., & Nelson, R. O. (1986). Equivalence class formation in language-able and language-disabled children. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 46, 243-257.
Showed a correlation between receptive language skills and the derivation of equivalence. Interpreted this correlation in RFT terms, suggesting that the correlation was due to the functional overlap of the two tasks.
 

Steven Hayes

Derived Relations Task With a Chimpanzee (video)

Derived Relations Task With a Chimpanzee (video)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NcgI-rxJOP8

Description: This is an old clip that's been used in a number of introductory RFT / derived relations slideshows. The video shows a chimpanzee having great difficulty in her efforts to solve a bidirectional task (after having learned a correspondence between different people and different letters on a keyboard, she has to «say» who goes to who by using a symbol meaning «to go to»).

admin

RFT Research Archives

RFT Research Archives

Community

Applied RFT

Applied RFT

The most obvious form of "applied" RFT is Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. However, ACT is only one small portion of the applied work being done that utilizes RFT concepts.

Indeed, the principles of RFT and procedures that RFT researchers are honing can be widely applicable to learning, education, child and adult development, clinical problems, and much more.

Below are some areas in which RFT is being used to predict and influence complex human phenomena and to help improve interventions in many clinically relevant areas.

RFT and Perspective Taking

Perspective-taking is a word that refers to a common experience in every one’s life. Behavioral scientists have talked about perspective-taking in many different ways, but the field tends to conceptualize that skill as an intrinsic capacity very often not susceptible to direct manipulation or training, which from a functional contextual point of view is not very useful. Additionally, RFT links this skill to other diverse psychological phenomena such as intelligence or experiential avoidance and it does it from a unique and theoretically coherent framework.

Nowadays, although the RFT started with work on children and kids with developmental disabilities, the literature is expanding to phenomena such as stigma (see Vilardaga et al. 2008 ppt), social anhedonia and psychosis (see Villatte et al, papers in the publication section). Perspective taking is a central aspect of what makes us most human: our ability to interact effectively with other human beings and to form groups, communities, countries and coalitions of countries. Work on deictic framing is a good example of the broad applicability of behavioral principles to human affairs.

RFT and Intervention in Autism Spectrum Disorder

A key aspect of language, and one that is at the core of communication deficits for children with autism, is generativity—put simply, the ability to produce or understand totally new sentences. Understanding and accounting for linguistic generativity is critical to any account of language development (Malott, 2003), and to the creation of programs for teaching flexible and fully functional language repertoires. RFT provides new insight into the issue of generativity, by conceptualizing the core skill in language as learned contextually controlled relational responding (referred to as relational framing).

Typically developing children learn relational framing through natural language interactions during which they are exposed to contingencies that establish these response patterns (e.g., Lipkens, Hayes & Hayes, 1993; Luciano, Gómez & Rodríguez, 2007). However, children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) do not easily learn this key form of responding (e.g., Rehfeldt, Dillen, Ziomek, & Kowalchuk, 2007) —while many children with ASD are able to learn functional language skills through explicit training, language use for many remains rote, despite intensive intervention (see, e.g., Luciano, Rodriguez, Manas, Ruiz, Berens, & Valdivia-Salas, 2009).

A number of recently published RFT-based studies, however, (e.g., Murphy, Barnes-Holmes & Barnes-Holmes, 2005; O’Connor, Rafferty, Barnes-Holmes & Barnes-Holmes, 2009) have begun to show that relational framing can be successfully trained in developmentally delayed populations including individuals with ASD. This work holds great promise for the future.

 REFERENCES

  • Lipkens, R., Hayes, S.C., & Hayes, L.J. (1993). Longitudinal study of the development of derived relations in an infant. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 56, 201-239.
  • Luciano, C., Gomez Becerra, I. & Rodriguez Valverde, M. (2007). The role of multiple- exemplar training and naming in establishing derived equivalence in an infant. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 87, 349-365.
  • Luciano, C., Rodriguez, M., Manas, I., Ruiz, F., Berens, N., & Valdivia-Salas, S. (2009). Acquiring the earliest relational operants: coordination, distinction, opposition, comparison and hierarchy. In Rehfeldt, R.A. & Barnes-Holmes, Y. (Eds.). Derived Relational Responding: Applications for Learners with Autism and other Developmental Disabilities. CA: New Harbinger.
  • Malott, R. W. (2003). Behavior analysis and linguistic productivity. Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 19, 11-18.
  • Murphy, C., Barnes-Holmes, D. & Barnes-Holmes, Y. (2005). Derived manding in children with autism: Synthesizing Skinner's Verbal Behavior with relational frame theory. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 59(1), 445-462.
  • O’Connor, J., Rafferty, A., Barnes-Holmes, D. & Barnes-Holmes , Y. (2009). The role of verbal behavior, stimulus nameability and familiarity on the equivalence performances of autistic and normally-developing children. The Psychological Record, 59(1), 53-74.
  • Rehfeldt, R.A. & Barnes-Holmes, Y. (2009). Derived Relational Responding: Applications for Learners with Autism and other Developmental Disabilities. CA: New Harbinger.
  • Rehfeldt, R. A., Dillen, J. E., Ziomek, M. M., & Kowalchuk, R. E. (2007). Assessing relational learning deficits in perspective-taking in children with high functioning autism spectrum disorder. The Psychological Record, 57, 23-47.

 Additional information will be added soon.

Jen Plumb

Research Procedures & Computer Programming

Research Procedures & Computer Programming

This section of the site is for researchers to share custom computer programs, files, instructions, information, and data useful for running computer-controlled experimental procedures. It is our hope that in sharing such information we can develop best practices to reduce the influence of extraneous variables on the results of computer-controlled RFT studies. Please share with the community what you and your lab do.

Disclaimer: All software and files provided on this site are distributed on an "as is" basis. The webmaster or authors of the programs assume no responsibility for problems or damage resulting from the use of these products.
Jen Plumb

Features of Well-Controlled Experimental Analogs

Features of Well-Controlled Experimental Analogs

There have been a number of tightly controlled experimental studies, both on RFT and ACT processes. There are resources within the RFT section of the site that will help you with your own studies, but there are a few that are currently posted to the ACT section of the site that you might find useful as well.

Please visit the Component Studies Information page for information on features of experimental analogs and sample files (visual basic command code, videos, instructions, etc.) from an ACT component study.

Jen Plumb

GO-IRAP Software and Manual

GO-IRAP Software and Manual

Welcome to the Ghent-Odysseus Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (GO-IRAP)! 

 

The GO-IRAP is a new version of the IRAP written in JAVA so it is easily installed, and the new user-friendly interface makes an IRAP very easy to set up.
 
Some new features of the GO-IRAP include:
  • Training and Traditional Testing IRAPs
  • Traditional (Label and Target) and Natural Language (Sentence) IRAP formats 
  • The easy input of complex languages and characters for stimuli and instructions 
  • The use of text or images as labels, targets, and response options
  • Block level or trial-type level application of mastery criteria
  • Label-Target-Response Option stimuli locking 
  • Incorrect and Correct responding feedback options
  • One easily readable .txt data and experimental file 

The 2 program files (32 bit and 64 bit versions) and the PDF of the manual are attached for all ACBS members to download. 

We are also attaching a folder named 'Training IRAP' which was recently used at a workshop presented at the Division of Behavior Analysis Conference in Dublin to demonstrate how the Training IRAP can easily be used in ABA settings to teach both basic and complex relational skills (Barnes-Holmes, McEnteggart, & Kavanagh, 2017). This folder also contains a paper entitled 'Teaching Important Relational Skills for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and Intellectual Disability Using Freely Available (GO-IRAP) Software'  which followed on from this workshop (Murphy & Barnes-Holmes, 2017).

Note: Bug Testing. We have been using the GO-IRAP in our research lab without encountering any problems, however, bug testing of the GO-IRAP is ongoing, so no guarantees can be made that no bugs or errors can be found within the program.

Note: Source Code. Because the GO-IRAP is still in the testing phase and there are additional features that we plan to add to the final version, we cannot make the source code available at this time, however we intend to make the source code open access in late 2020.

Also see the https://go-rft.com/ website!

ciara.mcenteggart

Mixed Trial IRAP Software

Mixed Trial IRAP Software

An introduction to the Mixed Trial Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (MT-IRAP)

We designed this program to hopefully provide a more flexible and sensitive tool for examining implicit relational responding. In particular, we are interested in developing/refining an implicit measure that is sensitive and reliable for measuring implicit relational responding at the level of individual stimuli and individual participants (as opposed to implicit effects at the level of stimulus categories and participant groups).

Preliminary data suggests the MT-IRAP can be used to measure implicit relational responding at both the stimulus category and individual stimulus level (Levin, Hayes & Waltz, 2010). It is unclear whether this measure is sensitive and reliable at the level of individual participants and whether it is more or less effective than the standard IRAP. Further research is needed to determine the reliability and validity of this measure, particularly with more ambiguous stimuli (e.g., where participants may be unsure of what is “truth” and what is a “lie”).

At this point, the exact configuration of the MT-IRAP is somewhat of a moving target and depends on the specific research questions being asked. Due to this, the program we have created provides a wide variety of configuration options. The flexibility in this program will hopefully be helpful to you as a researcher, though it may also require more time figuring out how to use it and the most appropriate configuration for a given study.

Please log in and download the MT-IRAP instructions (attached to the bottom of this page), this document contains a great deal more information about the procedures strengths and limitations.

Also, for further information about the MT-IRAP, we’d recommend you read the following article:
Levin, M.E., Hayes, S.C. & Waltz, T. (2010). Creating an implicit measure of cognition more suited to applied research: A test of the Mixed Trial – Implicit Relational Assessment Procedure (MT-IRAP). International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 6, 245-262.

Disclaimer: This program is still being developed so you may run into errors while using it. Although we have tried to make it user friendly when possible, due to limited resources and the complexity of the program, it does require some time to get used to using.

Michael Levin

National University of Ireland, Maynooth IRAP software

National University of Ireland, Maynooth IRAP software

The Implicit Relational Assessment Procedures (IRAP)

This software has been used extensively to assess implicit relational responding, or responding that is outside of conscious awareness. This program was developed as an alternative to the Implicit Assessment Test (IAT) which was developed with social psychology as a way to assess implicit biases. While the IAT requires participants to categorize lists of words, the IRAP is designed to assess relational responses using contextual cues of interest. There are numerous studies that have used the IRAP, compared its results to that of (explicit) self-reported beliefs, and some that have compared it directly to the IAT. See the Empirical Support page for a detailed list of studies.

admin

Ole Miss IRAP software

Ole Miss IRAP software

Below is a zip file containing the Ole Miss IRAP (version 3.5). The program is easy to learn and readily adapted for your own research interests. The pdf file is the current manual for installing and using the program. I recommend reading this manual before anything else (it's only six pages). In addition to installation instructions and explanations of the program features, it also contains some useful information about handling participants and accessing data.

While the Ole Miss IRAP is copyrighted, this was done to keep it freely available. I encourage researchers to use, distribute, and modify the program as they see fit. Feel free to contact me if you encounter technical problems installing or using the program, or even if you would just like to bounce a study idea off of me. I'm all about the research and will do what I can to help.

Have fun!

Chad Drake

Ole Miss Matching-to-Sample software

Ole Miss Matching-to-Sample software

The lab at the University of Mississippi has made software available for the traditional matching-to-sample procedure. Below is an attachment containing a Visual Basic.NET program for a three-member, three class procedure. You will need to be logged into the ACBS website as a member in order to see and download the attachment.

Chad Drake

PsyScope: (Mac only) Easy-to-Use Software for Running Computer-Controlled Experiments

PsyScope: (Mac only) Easy-to-Use Software for Running Computer-Controlled Experiments

PsyScope: Easy-to-Use Software for Running Computer-Controlled Experiments in Psychology

PsyScope is for the Macintosh Platform only but several FREE Apple Macintosh emulators are available for download on line. PsyScope (Cohen, MacWhinney, Flatt, & Provost, 1993) is a user-friendly freeware Macintosh application which undergoes on-going development by psychologists for psychologists. It is the easiest to use and most versatile experiment generation software available, and it’s free.

PsyScope allows researchers to design complex psychology experiments without the need for programming skills. As the user constructs spider diagrams in a graphic interface using a limited number of graphic tools, PsyScope writes a scripting file which can be accessed directly by users familiar with scripting.

admin

Relational Completion Procedure (Dymond & Whelan, 2010)

Relational Completion Procedure (Dymond & Whelan, 2010)

An alternative to match-to-sample procedures, the Relational Completion Procedure is available below. 

The article is available in the publications section of the site, and by clicking directly here

The "Relational Completion Procedure.zip" file below is the more recent of the two files. Updates may be available at Simon Dymond's website as well.

Jen Plumb

Training and Assessment of Relational Precursors and Abilities (TARPA)

Training and Assessment of Relational Precursors and Abilities (TARPA)

Understanding and accounting for the ability to produce and understand completely novel sentences--accounting for the generativity of language--is critical to any account of language development (Malott, 2003), and to the creation of programs for teaching flexible and fully functional language repertoires.

RFT explains linguistic generativity in terms of learned contextually controlled relational responding referred to as relational framing. Typically developing children learn relational framing through natural language interactions during which they are exposed to contingencies that establish these response patterns (e.g., Lipkens, Hayes & Hayes, 1993; Luciano, Gómez & Rodríguez, 2007). However, children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) do not easily learn this key form of responding (e.g., Rehfeldt, Dillen, Ziomek, & Kowalchuk, 2007). Nonetheless, they can benefit from training of this repertoire (e.g., Murphy & Barnes-Holmes, 2009).

The Training & Assessment of Relational Precursors & Abilities (TARPA) is a recently developed computer-based protocol for the assessment of a progression of key domains of responding critical to the development of generative language. The TARPA is comprised of ten stages as follows: (i) basic discrimination; (ii) conditional discrimination involving similarity; (iii) conditional discrimination involving non-similarity (2 comparisons); (iv) conditional discriminations involving non-similarity (3 comparisons); (v) mutually entailed relational responding [e.g., deriving the symmetrical relation B --> A from the trained relation A --> B] (2 comparisons); (vi) mutually entailed relational responding (3 comparisons); (vii) combinatorial entailed relational responding [e.g., deriving the combinatorial relations A --> C and C --> A when trained with A--> B and B--> C] (2 comparisons); (viii) transfer of function [responding to a stimulus in a new and appropriate way based on it’s participation in a derived sameness relation] (2 comparisons); (ix) combinatorial entailed relational responding (3 comparisons); (x) transfer of function (3 comparisons). Each stage is further subdivided into multiple levels, and in the stages assessing derived relations (i.e., Stages 5-10), levels are subdivided into training sections and derivation sections.

A preliminary version of the TARPA has been correlated with the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale (VABS; Sparrow, Cicchetti & Balla, 2005). Currently ongoing research is using the most up-to-date version to assess the emergence of relational responding with typically developing children and children with autism in order to correlate performance on this protocol with level of functioning as assessed using standardized measures of language and cognition (e.g., PLS-4; Zimmerman, Steiner & Pond, 2002) as well as to gain some insight into the hierarchical structuring and other features of the protocol to aid its further development and refinement. For access to the TARPA and the TARPA manual, please email Siri Ming at siri@siriming.com

REFERENCES

  • Lipkens, R., Hayes, S.C., & Hayes, L.J. (1993). Longitudinal study of the development of derived relations in an infant. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 56, 201-239.
  • Luciano, C., Gomez Becerra, I. & Rodriguez Valverde, M. (2007). The role of multiple- exemplar training and naming in establishing derived equivalence in an infant. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 87, 349-365.
  • Malott, R. W. (2003). Behavior analysis and linguistic productivity. Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 19, 11-18.
  • Murphy, C. & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2009). Derived more-less relational mands in children diagnosed with autism. Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 42, 253–268.
  • Rehfeldt, R. A., Dillen, J. E., Ziomek, M. M., & Kowalchuk, R. E. (2007). Assessing relational learning deficits in perspective-taking in children with high functioning autism spectrum disorder. The Psychological Record, 57, 23-47.
  • Sparrow S. S., Cicchetti D.V & Balla D. A. (2005). Vineland II Adaptive Behavior Scales. (2nd ed.) American Guidance Service, Inc., Circle Pines, MN.
  • Zimmerman, I. L., Steiner, V. G., & Pond, R. E. (2002). Preschool language scale-4. San Antonio, TX: Harcourt Assessment.
Ian Stewart

Training relational operants

Training relational operants

Below and attached includes a listserv discussion on training relational operants. 

 

THIS IS A DISCUSSION FROM A POST BY DARIN CAIRNS ON THE RFT LISTSERVE (I HAVE ATTACHED IT AS A WORD DOCUMENT AS WELL IN CASE THE FORMATTING IS TOUGH TO READ HERE.)

 

Hi there all I’m currently putting a curriculum together for working with children with Autism and have been getting remarkable success using exemplar based relational frame procedures.
Currently we are;
1) Using exemplar training (altering certain elements to highlight distinctions etc and using familiar labels etc – eg for Dad we’ll use child’s Dad’s name first then moving to less familiar names)
2) targeting specific frames - mainly hierarchical and didactic
3) using specified entailment and transformation of functions as performance goals
4) Using mastery criteria is still hard to pin but functionality is the goal anyway so we’re using RESA(A); Retention, Endurance, Stability and Application (we view the Entailment as Adductions) – for those familiar this from the Precision Teaching guys (sans the response rate at this stage – but very soon will have that).
We are messing around with prompting strats, errorless learning preparations, different ways to present the exemplars to vary the ease of acquisition of the response and then moving to framing (not sure if this is right as over selectivity may actually be enhanced and framing hindered), also looking at how to present exemplars in different orders to make the relational aspect more apparent etc etc etc….
My questions for the list are;
a) Other than coordination which seems to have to come first; do people have any thoughts on the order frames should be taught in?
b) Has anyone studied how one frame impacts upon another frame?
c) Is anyone aware of what sort of exemplars are better for teaching relational frames
d) Has anyone studied how the acquisition of a set of frames (or just a specific one) facilitates a learners ability to move through a curriculum or other tests eg how the acquisition of condionality and causality impacts on problem solving in general)
e) Has anyone studied how to ‘pull part’ relational networks (ie to identify how a person is making reasoning errors from an RFT perspective we could identify the required frames and then assess if they are functioning for the learner/performer)
Lots of questions. Any thoughts, references, ideas would be much appreciated.
All the best (and congrats on the Time article Steve – I think it will resonate with many by being presented the way it was, and engender curiosity even from those who thought it was ‘kooky’)
D
Darin Cairns
Clinical Psychologist Supervisor
Country Autism Services
Country Services Coordination
Hi Darin -- the attached three articles are relevant to questions a, b, c,
and e (nothing on d yet). Ian Stewart, John McElwee, Yvonne and I have
been looking at broadly similar issues -as those below, but in the context
of producing relevant educational software. Ian and John ran a workshop at
last year's ABA.

D.

Darin,

As Dermot mentioned in his post, myself, John McElwee, Dermot and Yvonne
put together a protocol for training up arbitarily applicable relational
responding in learning disabled children, which we've been refining for
the last year or so. This protocol is computer-based, and, drawing on a
database of electronic pictures and sounds, it allows a teacher to lead
a child through various stages which train and test mutual and
combinatorial entailment via multiple exemplars.

John and myself have been involved in workshops on Early Intensive
Behavioral Intervention and RFT the previous few ABAs and this summer
we're giving a similar one with the same theme - demonstrating to EIBI
people the effectiveness of RFT-type interventions for training language
generativity in learning disabled children. This summers workshop we'll
be discussing the extension of the original computer protocol via the
creation of a protocol that trains and tests relational pre-cursors from
simple dicriminations, through non arbitrary relational conditional
discriminations, through arbitrary relational conditional
discriminations. We'll also be discussing how this work relates to the
ABLA, and the ABLLS early learning protocols, and more specifically, how
RFT predicts the type of patterns that are seen in terms of the
correlations between ABLA and stimulus equivalence and language
performance. We are currently writing a paper on the latter and applying
for funding to test specific RFT-based predictions with regard to the
difficulty of various stages of the ABLA.

Your questions are very important ones. In our RFT-based analysis of the
ABLSS curriculum we are stressing the importance of the order of
training particular frames and how particular types of frames are indeed
necessary precursors of others. For example, flexible contextual control
over same/different responding may be an important precursor of
hierarchy. If you or others are interested I can send you past ABA
workshop .ppt presentations on EIBI and RFT.

Best,

Ian.

Hey Darin;

I think the work you are doing is important. In terms of the
sequence of which frames should be taught first, I am not sure the
data is there to guide us on this issue. Thus, put on your
clinicians hat and monkey around. Choose a frame that will have the
greatest impact for the child in his or her environment. In other
words, what frames will the child's environment immediately support
and what frames, once established will be of most use for that child
to more effective participate and operate in his/her environemnt.
This is a logical exercise. But, I suspect that a) the logic will
steer you right in many cases & b) you will hit walls that will
require troubleshooting. These successes and temporary walls are
perhaps the most important bits of information for the field. Keep
us posted so the basic minded folks can help work out the issues
that will assuredly crop up.

Question: Do have non-arbitrary tasks built into your training
sequences? Whether these are absolutely necessary pre-requisites is
still uncertain. Several studies they have definitely shown to
facilitative or the development of arbitrarily applicable derived
relational responding. But I suspect when working with language
delayed indivduals non-arbitrary tasks will be particularily useful
in making the targeted relation more salient. There are a lot of
good old studies (50'-70's) showing how MET can facilitate what's
been labeled transposition. Which is, crudely put, responding in
terms of a relation and not an absolute value.

TONY;
I agree the mistakes may be very enlightening. Again, I think the
early transposition literature sheds light on the issue of these
mistakes and implicitly (not explicity because authors often
relegate these mistakes and sucesses to the realm of schemas or
language as mediator) demonstrates ways to program training
materials such as to promote derived relational responding.

I agree that errorless procedures are often times great remedies. I
found it VERY difficult, during my pilot work for my thesis that
when dealing with derived relational responding, it is very hard to
get kids ("typically developing") to "get" the target relation and
not some other absolute property of the stimulus conditions.

FINAL NOTE (I half-heartedly promise): Would it be alright if I
posted these contributions to this thread on the RFT list to the
education section of contextualpsychology.com


Hi Nick hows it going?
I think it would be fine to put this on the education list. The more ideas and insight the better.
Choose a frame that has greatest impact for the child;
1) To me Baer’s behavioural cusp concept applies here. But it’s interesting to consider how one identifies a required frame. We could do an example of cusp analysis with frames.
2) Cusps also apply to ‘bang for your buck’ in terms of what the curriculum sequence will benefit from the most. Ie the PT guys look at tool skills to promote generative learning. I wonder what the ‘tool’ frames are in a given curriculum context?
Do we have non arbitrary tasks built in to help language delayed individuals target relation more salient?
1) We’re messing around with it but this is definitely something that interests me. If I’m interpreting you correctly, what I can feedback at this point is that the non-arbitrary tasks have proven the fastest road to relational framing for the learner. We kinda think of it as a sort of ‘within stimulus’ prompt as the answer lay in explicit previous learning and then we lead them to more purely relational situations where they must entail. When we don’t prep this way the children become anxious and start guessing.
2) Can you throw me some refs? Interested in the MTS examples you are referring to.
3) The issue of protecting the learner from over-selectivity pops up at this point too as the non arb stuff can play right into the hands of non relational behaviour being reinforced at the expense of relational…
Mistakes…
1) Have been fascinating to watch and have directed our approach with the learner quite a lot.
2) I wonder if IRAP procedures can be used here to give us insights into the relevant networks and construct the instructional design from there…?
3) What errorless learning strats (ie prompts) did you try in your thesis Nick? It’s a real struggle here too. Non arb being the only real strat we have (I’m wary of visuals). We have tried to conmstruct a hierarchy based on how previous learning will support the correct answer (ie non arb), not impact directly on framing (ie we use hypothetical examples), to impacting against framing relationally (Ie use examples where the entailment is logically true but experientially wrong – ie the child has to ‘trust’ the entailment not his explicit learning history)
Here’s a question. If we forget the order issue what is the process (I have avoided the word mechanism ) by which a frame effects another frame? What is necessary for a frame to ‘bump’ into another frame and then change it? This will go a long way to helping us understand generative learning and adductions I’d think. Real bang for your buck instructional designing.
D
Darin Cairns
Clinical Psychologist Supervisor
Country Services Coordination

The cusp concept looks like another way of saying “increases psychological flexibility” (“behavioral cusp” is in a frame of coordination with “increases psychological flexibility”?)
Re: “Here’s a question. If we forget the order issue what is the process (I have avoided the word mechanism ) by which a frame effects another frame? What is necessary for a frame to ‘bump’ into another frame and then change it?”
Along the lines of a comment in Ian’s earlier post, it seems to me that coordination and difference are essential for hierarchy. In broader RFT/ACT terms, once coordination and difference are established – which respectively have the most precision and the broadest scope, hierarchical relations serve to attenuate/balance precision and scope in context - and thus to increase behavioral flexibility. In other words, frames don’t bump into other frames unless/until we relate relations….relate multiple exemplars qua correspondence AND difference and you get hierarchy….
Once you get correspondence, difference, hierarchy, only then are more complex relations possible - deictic, conditional, and beyond…
Seems right
One thing
It seems to me that as soon as you have multiple frames you can
leverage training by demanding several simultaneously.
In other words, you can make them "bump into" each other
usefully
For example
Once a kid has coordination and difference, you can
a) use exclusion to train new material so that it simultaneously
strengthens frames of cooridination and differnce.
For example, saying "where's the gug-gub" in the presence of a
novel object and a ball (that is in a frame of coordination with "ball")
is a good way to have another "ball trial" AND distinguish balls and gub-gubs
AND train a frame of coordination between the novel object and "gub-gub."
b) similarly you can train using deliberate errors. Once the kid relaly knows Mommy, point to
Ma-Ma and say "there's Daddy" and pause. The kid will laugh or otherwise
indicate the error. "That right, That's not Daddy ... that's Mommy!"
You simultaneously apply a frame of coordination twice and a frame of distinction
c) similarly you can early on play with flexible contextual control.
(If Ma Ma was Da Da, where's Ma Ma?). This is cool because it simultaneously
strenghtens two instances of a FoC and a FoD, plus it makes the Crel control
more arbitrary
To do these kinds of things you need multiple frames ... and I think even in
the earliest training of FoC, it should be done along of training others frames.
it makes the relational feature more likely to be the invariant. For example,
why just train "Da Da" when you can also train "not Da Da."
Lots of discrete trail programs seem to ignore the benefits this can provide
- S
Steven C. Hayes

Right on! And... In defense of training just "da da." I think
there are two issues.
1) Thinking that way has not hit the main pipeline just yet. It is
out of the box. I do not believe that training "not da da" is in
most peoples realm of importance let alone possibility.
2) (this one may take me a while). Discrete trials are most commonly
used in the world ABA with autism. Initially, it is often difficult
to get any kind of vocal responding under stimulus control. With
some kids it is a real pain in the @** struggle.
As such, I think that a large part of the field has been or is
quite impressed by the POWER of reinforcement to train just about
behavior (yes yes not sophisticated language behavior like I am
displaying right here before your very eyes) that we just plug on to
see what else we can bring to strength. This is done, without
looking at the broader desired repertiore. Sometimes I feel that we
are engaging in a modern form of S-R psychology. Call it R-S
psychology. By the way this statement is not meant to indeminfy any
individual/s. As I have the utmost respect for the work I just
described.

 

Nick B
 

admin

Research Failures

Research Failures

It seems important to let the world know about RFT research failures or disconfirmations of the theory. If you have any, please add a daughter page and describe the study as well as you can to let the community know about it. If you have ideas about why it might have failed, feel free to list them. If you think that it did not work because RFT is incorrect, feel free to state that and to suggests necessary changes to the theory, both big and small.

If few pages are added, do not jump to the conclusion that there are few failures. This page is designed to invite them into the light but often researchers hold failures back.

To this date, I confess I know of no RFT failures. But if they are there, we want them to be known, and given good visibility here on the ACBS website.

Steven Hayes

Communication au symposium Pleine Conscience des 37èmes Journées Scientifiques de l'AFTCC, Paris 12 décembre 2009

Communication au symposium Pleine Conscience des 37èmes Journées Scientifiques de l'AFTCC, Paris 12 décembre 2009

Étude pilote ouverte d’un groupe de psychoéducation à la pleine conscience et l’acceptation à l’intention de personnes vivant avec un trouble bipolaire.

J. GRAND (1), B. PUTOIS (2), B. SCHOENDORFF (3)
(1) Psychothérapeute libérale, Lyon
(2) Université Louis Lumière, Lyon
(3) Université Claude Bernard, Lyon

Problématique:

Conception, mise en place et évaluation d’un programme de groupe ouvert de psychoéducation à la pleine conscience et l’acceptation pour personnes bipolaires. 

Méthode:

Étude pilote sous forme de groupe ouvert de psychoéducation (6 séances d’intervention et deux de suivi) au sein d’une association de personnes bipolaires à Lyon. 21 personnes ont participé, mais seulement 5 aux 4 points de mesures (7 à trois points). Du fait de la nature de groupe ouvert, le choix avait été fait de limiter les évaluations.
Seulement deux mesures ont été utilisées : le questionnaire d’Acceptation et d’Action-AAQ2 (Hayes 2004) et la « Cible des valeurs » (Lundgren 2005).

Résultats:

L’augmentation moyenne des scores AAQ n’était pas significative.
Les résultats au questionnaire de la cible des valeurs pré-post (N=7) montraient une augmentation des actions dans le domaine travail/formation (ANOVAChi² = 8,00 p=0,018; d=1,61), mais pas de différence au suivi à 6
mois (N=5). Il n’y avait pas de différence dans le domaine du soin physique personnel (sauf entre pré et mid,
N=7). Dans le domaine des relations, il y avait une différence significative (N=5) entre post et suivi à 6 mois
(p=0,04). Globalement, il y avait un effet tendanciel pré-post sur la cible des valeurs (p=0,063).
Cette intervention n’a donc pas eu d’effet sur la capacité d’acceptation des participants ni leurs actions en
direction de leurs valeurs dans le domaine des loisirs, elle n’a eu d’effet sur les actions dans le domaine des soins
personnels qu’au début de l’intervention (pré-mid), et dans le domaine du travail qu’entre le début et la fin de
l’intervention (pré-post). Ces effets n’étaient pas maintenus au suivi. Enfin, pour 5 sujets, il y avait un effet sur
les relations entre la fin du traitement et le suivi à 6 mois.

Discussion:

Cette étude pilote suggère que la forme de groupe ouvert choisie n’est pas une façon adaptée de délivrer l’ACT à
une population bipolaire. Nous avons tenu à faire connaître ces résultats négatifs et proposerons quelques pistes
pour une meilleure adaptation d’un traitement, qui semble donner de bons résultats dans notre pratique
individuelle chez cette population.

benjamin schoendorff

Research Predictions

Research Predictions

Please add a child page describing any predictions you may have based on RFT. You should state the reasons for the prediction clearly, and be sure to leave your name.

By putting it on the page you are giving away the idea -- anyone is free to test it. However, we would ask if anyone does that, they ask the individual if they want to be acknowledged in the article that may result (not necesarily as an author, but perhaps in a footnote ... such as "The core ideas tested in this article was first suggested to us by Bessy Bluebottom, and we would like to thank her for the suggestion." Something like that.)

Steven Hayes

IRAP

IRAP

Some theoretical questions and question-hypotheses concerning the IRAP and RFT:

The IRAP seems to be a measure of implicit preferences, in contrast with the explicit preferences. Explicit preferences are more influenced by social control (eg political correctness).

1. Does relational framing influence the more implicit preferences as well as the explicit? And if yes, how?

2. Can we say it’s good to be aware of our implicit preferences (as revealed by the IRAP) and make choices without bringing them into account? The implicit is good to know, to realize it’s there. But the explicit is the more important? We can learn to live our life in the direction of our explicit preferences. E.g.: ‘Muslims are terrorists’ vs ‘I want to live with all kinds of people. Not all Muslims are equal. I do respect them.’ IRAP might reveal the first relation, but the second could be more important.

3. When existing relational networks are extended with new S, will these S influence the implicit functions or the explicit or both (depending on context)?

4. when the implicit preferences and the explicit preferences are different, contextual influences are responsible for these differences? Experiential avoidance, political correctness, … If these contextual S are not present, the implicit and explicit preferences are growing more toward each other?

5. cognitive therapy is working on the explicit relations by social control? After cognitive therapy the implicit positions might stay unchanged?

6. when the social pressure is very high (IRAP on ‘Muslims are terrorists’ taken by a clearly Muslim researcher and without anonymity) even the implicit measures could be influenced? (contextual cues are stronger).

7. explicit, but perhaps also implicit preferences can reverse? E.g. the Muslim-experiment described above: when after a while the apparently-Muslim researcher says he’s anti-Muslim (eg political refugee) – after this the IRAP-scores might reverse?

Francis De Groot

francis.de.groot@fracarita.org

Francis De Groot

RFT and Basic Social Research

RFT and Basic Social Research

First, I would like to say that, from my reading of Part I. in the RFT book, it seems the overall program of research has a stable foothold within behavior analysis. This is further accentuated by the fact that applied research is beginning to appear in the Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis (see Ninness et al.)in which RFT principles are built into a computer program which teaches trigonomic functions and their graphical representations in an efficient manner. Believe me, it works...I am a co-author on the latest of these RFT/math studies, and, coming into the project, I knew pretty much nothing about functions and their graphical representations but after approx. an hour in the program as a pilot subject I had a firm grasp on the concepts...as well as many novel formulae and graphs never before seen.

Because work like this is emerging along side a strong basic research program, I think RFT is here to stay. As for its future, I have been working on a way to study meta/macrocontingencies and cultural materialism in a basic laboratory setting. This area is the domain of "cultural analysis," or "behavioral anthropology," and even crosses over into OBM. When studied behavior-analytically the phrase "culture" is really synonymous with "social behavior."

If this basic research catches on, I predict the future could see a merging of both research programs in order to study how relational framing operates in relation to social behavior. The beauty about this particular social-behavioral research program is that it begins (presumably) in a laboratory setting analogous to the most basic contexts which give rise to interlocking contingencies as they occur in nature, and as they (presumably) occurred in the evolution of cultures. So, this program would (presumably) be the most thourough, inductive, investigation of social behavior to-date. This is similar to the beginnings of the behavior-analytic research program in general: Skinner started with the most basic contexts and slowly built upon them until now, where we can study language and cognition, and do so in an inductive, non-hypothetical, manner.

Perhaps combining RFT with such research could reveal principles relevant to symbolic behavior, myths, taboos, and "norms" etc... but would do so with the precision of a basic behavioral laboratory. Other basic researchers are already hard at work developing an equation of choice behavior, perhaps a few decades will reveal equations of norms, taboos, and even a "terrorism equation." It seems pretty far-fetched, but what an exciting way to earn a living!

Shawn Boles added on 4/25/2006:

Tony Biglan has written on this as well.

Changing Cultural Practices

Hardcover: 464 pages
Publisher: Context Press (January 1, 1995)
Language: English
ISBN: 1878978225

Todd A. Ward

RFT and magical thinking in childhood

RFT and magical thinking in childhood

RFT and magical thinking: hypothesis

A hypothesis: is it possible that the period of ‘magical thinking’ in the development of children (enduring until adulthood) is depending on the development of processes central in RFT: developing of mutual entailment, literality of thoughts, reason giving and causal thinking? When children are developing those skills, but aren’t fully acquainted with them, they might more easily fall in the traps of magical thinking.

Possible test: children who are later in developing those skills, should show delayed magical thinking too (and vice versa).

Francis De Groot

francis.de.groot@fracarita.org

Francis De Groot

Whole Lotta Predictions

Whole Lotta Predictions

I challenged the RFT list serve to come up with some good solid predictions that went beyond the several dozen in the RFT book.

This list, raw and unfiltered, is the result. Some of these ideas are great. Some seem off. And anyone was and is allowed to play. But it seemed more important to get people thinking than to get it right if "right" meant that some "leader" says "this is right."

If you have ideas, back up to the next highest level and add a child page and put yours out there!

- S

Steve Hayes

Predictions from Steve

  • Responding in accordance with a coherent relational network will take less time (on average) than responding in accordance with an incoherent network (subject, of course, to the usual caveats concerning individual histories).
  • Relating derived relations will produce some of the same effects that have been observed for analogical reasoning
  • RFT models of semantic relations, analogy, executive function tasks, perspective-taking and the like should produce neural effects that overlap to some degree with the effects observed in the mainstream neuro-cog literature.
  • Increasing the extent, flexibility, and fluency of relational frames, relational networks, relating relations, relating relational networks, the transformation of functions, and contextual control over each of these, should impact positively on a variety of standard measures of human language and cognition.

Steve posted a list of new things RFT does to the Academy of Cognitive Therapy
June 2005. The list was:

RFT:

  • Provides new ways to do language training
  • Has lead to a new and increasingly empirically supported psychotherapy
    (ACT) and to quite number of new psychotherapy techniques
  • Suggests how to establish a sense of self in children
  • Shows some of how to train children in "theory of mind"
  • Gives a process account of mindfulness
  • Predicts how many basic cognitive skills form
  • Predicts new ways to increase openness to new learning
  • Explains some of where psychological rigidity comes from
  • Leads to a new model of psychopathology
  • Suggests some of the core skills involves in language and its subskills such as analogy and metaphor
  • Shows why existing information processing research in specific areas (e.g., analogy) is flawed and show how to correct that flaw
  • Predicts new methods how to increase some intellectual abilities
  • Predicts new methods for how to increase motivation verbally
  • Predicts some new methods to decrease motivation verbally
  • Has lead to new ways we might assess current cognitive relations
  • Explains some of why cognitive fusion emerges, why it is harmful, and what to do about it
  • Explains some of why experiential avoidance emerges, why it is harmful, and what to do about it
  • Provides unexpected predictions about neurobiological responses to specific cognitive tasks

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What happens to Crel and Cfun in RFT studies when you teach folks to apply defusion during testing, and or when you teach defusion, train, and then test? I am thinking of M Dougher's recent study with > or < relations with shock. I wonder whether defusion would alter the transformation, perhaps leading subjects to not rip off the shock electrodes in the context of > relation. I wonder whether defusion would strengthen or perhaps weaken Crel and/or Cfun. My guess is that it may result in more rapid learning of Crel, but knock out Cfun. This would be cool to show. Maybe someone has done this, but if not we really should cook up some experiments along these lines.

-j forsyth

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1. Additional corollary hypotheses:
(A) Speed of acquisition of AARR during an REP task (i.e., number of trials needed to respond consistently correctly) will correlate significantly and inversely with verbal IQ. (can’t recall off hand if Denis O’Hora has already tested this specifically yet).
(B) This one would be a doozie to quantify and test, but it follows from RFT: Subjects presented with a novel metaphor who generate higher numbers of apt comparisons (especially in shorter amounts of time) will perform better (i.e., will respond correctly more frequently and given less training trials) in an REP task that assesses their ability to correctly derive relations after two previously trained frames are brought into coordination.
2. Additional corollary hypotheses:
(A) AARR in fully verbal subjects will fail to occur over time within an experimental context, given a consistent lack of reinforcement for AARR and/or consistent punishment of AARR within that context.
3. Additional corollary hypotheses:
(A) The same established verbal relation (e.g., A is similar to B, which is similar to C) can be shown to accompany different functional transformations across different experimental contexts.
(B) Identical functional transformations can be shown to be achieved through the training of different verbal relations.

J T

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read some RFT-research on the change of psychological function of stimulus C by putting it in relation with A-B (sexual excitement, taste preference, mood). What if C is relationally framed with 2 different classes: A-B-C, and X-Y-C. And let's say A is experienced a bit negative, and X also a bit negative. Would C become experienced more negative, than when it's framed with only one class? This might be an operationalisation of multiple small life experiences leading to a larger reaction.

De Groot, Francis [francis.de.groot@fracarita.org]

Steven Hayes