A FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF RECEPTIVE LANGUAGE AND PRODUCTIVE SPEECH: ACQUISITION OF THE PLURAL MORPHEME1

Operant conditioning procedures were applied to two retardates to establish receptive auditory plurals: correct pointing to single or paired objects was reinforced after hearing singular or plural labels. This training proceeded until an errorless (generative) criterion of correct performance was ac...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of applied behavior analysis Vol. 2; no. 1; pp. 55 - 64
Main Author Guess, Doug
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing Ltd 1969
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0021-8855
1938-3703
DOI10.1901/jaba.1969.2-55

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Summary:Operant conditioning procedures were applied to two retardates to establish receptive auditory plurals: correct pointing to single or paired objects was reinforced after hearing singular or plural labels. This training proceeded until an errorless (generative) criterion of correct performance was achieved. Unreinforced probes measuring expressive use of singulars and plurals were interspersed in this receptive training. Neither subject generalized from this receptive training to expressive plurals, in that each used singulars when labeling pairs. Then, both subjects were directly trained in conventional expressive plurals to an errorless (generative) criterion. The previous design was then repeated, but the receptive repertoire was reversed: pointing at pairs in response to singular labels was reinforced, and vice‐versa. Unreinforced probes of expressive plural usage again showed its independence of the current receptive repertoire in that conventional (unreversed) plural usage was displayed. Thus, the independence of the expressive repertoire (even when unreinforced) from the reinforced patterns of the receptive repertoire was demonstrated.
Bibliography:This paper is based in part on a dissertation submitted by the author in partial fulfillment of the Ed.D. degree at the University of Kansas. The author is grateful to his advisor, Dr. J. O. Smith for his support and encouragement in this research project. The author is also grateful to Dr. Donald M. Baer for suggestions about experimental design, and to him and Mr. Wayne Sailor, University of Kansas, for assistance in preparing the manuscript.
ISSN:0021-8855
1938-3703
DOI:10.1901/jaba.1969.2-55