CORRESPONDENCE IN CHILDREN’S SELF REPORT: TACTING AND MANDING ASPECTS

Authors

  • Antonio De Freitas Ribeiro Universidade de Brasília

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18542/rebac.v1i2.795

Abstract

Four boys and 4 girls (3 to 5 years old) played with as many as three toys chosen from a set of six, and were then asked whether they palyed with each of the toys. After a baseline in which all children showed high levels of correspondence between reported and actual behavior, reports of play were differentially reinforced, first in an individual and then in a social context. Two children in the individual condition began to report play with all six toys, even though no more than three toys had been played with. When reports of play were reinforced in a group context, 5 children reported play with all six toys. When correspondence was subsequently reinforced, virtually complete correspondence returned and was maintained in a third noncontingent reinforcement condition. Correspondence and lack of correspondence were discussed in terms o self-tacting and distorted tacting or manding.Key words: verbal behavior, (self ) tacting, distorted tacting and manding, correspondence training, rulegovernedbehavior, truth telling and lying, self-report, children.

Published

2016-04-11

Issue

Section

Classical Article