Overview[edit]

Introduction[edit]

Relational frame theory (RFT) is a behavioral theory of human language. It is rooted in functional contextualism and focused on predicting and influencing verbal behavior with precision, scope and depth.[8]


Relational framing is relational responding based on arbitrarily applicable relations and arbitrary stimulus functions. The relational responding is subject to mutual entailment, combinatorial mutual entailment and transformation of stimulus functions. The relations and stimulus functions are controlled by contextual cues.[9]

Contextual cues and stimulus functions[edit]

In human language a word, sentence or a symbol (e.g. stimulus) can have a different meaning (e.g. functions), depending on context.


In terms of RFT, it is said that in human language a stimulus can have different stimulus functions depending on contextual cues.[9]


Take these two sentences for example:

Development[edit]

RFT is a behavioral account of language and higher cognition.[15] In his 1957 book Verbal Behavior, B.F. Skinner presented an interpretation of language. However, this account was intended to be an interpretation as opposed to an experimental research program, and researchers commonly acknowledge that the research products are somewhat limited in scope. For example, Skinner's behavioral interpretation of language has been useful in some aspects of language training in developmentally disabled children, but it has not led to a robust research program in the range of areas relevant to language and cognition, such as problem-solving, reasoning, metaphor, logic, and so on. RFT advocates are fairly bold in stating that their goal is an experimental behavioral research program in all such areas, and RFT research has indeed emerged in a large number of these areas, including grammar.[16]


In a review of Skinner's book, linguist Noam Chomsky argued that the generativity of language shows that it cannot simply be learned, that there must be some innate "language acquisition device". Many have seen this review as a turning point, when cognitivism took the place of behaviorism as the mainstream in psychology. Behavior analysts generally viewed the criticism as somewhat off point,[17] but it is undeniable that psychology turned its attention elsewhere and the review was very influential in helping to produce the rise of cognitive psychology.


Despite the lack of attention from the mainstream, behavior analysis is alive and growing. Its application has been extended to areas such as language and cognitive training.[18] Behavior analysis has long been extended as well to animal training, business and school settings, as well as hospitals and areas of research.


RFT distinguishes itself from Skinner's work by identifying and defining a particular type of operant conditioning known as arbitrarily applicable derived relational responding (AADRR). In essence, the theory argues that language is not associative but is learned and relational. For example, young children learn relations of coordination between names and objects; followed by relations of difference, opposition, before and after, and so on. These are "frames" in the sense that once relating of that kind is learned, any event can be related in that way mutually and in combination with other relations, given a cue to do so. This is a learning process that to date appears to occur only in humans possessing a capacity for language: to date relational framing has not yet been shown unambiguously in non-human animals despite many attempts to do so. AADRR is theorized to be a pervasive influence on almost all aspects of human behavior. The theory represents an attempt to provide a more empirically progressive account of complex human behavior while preserving the naturalistic approach of behavior analysis.[18]

Evidence[edit]

Approximately 300 studies have tested RFT ideas.[3] Supportive data exists in the areas needed to show that an action is "operant" such as the importance of multiple examples in training derived relational responding, the role of context, and the importance of consequences. Derived relational responding has also been shown to alter other behavioral processes such as classical conditioning, an empirical result that RFT theorists point to in explaining why relational operants modify existing behavioristic interpretations of complex human behavior. Empirical advances have also been made by RFT researchers in the analysis and understanding of such topics as metaphor, perspective taking, and reasoning.[19]


Proponents of RFT often indicate the failure to establish a vigorous experimental program in language and cognition as the key reason why behavior analysis fell out of the mainstream of psychology despite its many contributions, and argue that RFT might provide a way forward. The theory is still somewhat controversial within behavioral psychology, however. At the current time the controversy is not primarily empirical since RFT studies[20] publish regularly in mainstream behavioral journals and few empirical studies have yet claimed to contradict RFT findings. Rather the controversy seems to revolve around whether RFT is a positive step forward, especially given that its implications seem to go beyond many existing interpretations and extensions from within this intellectual tradition.[21]

Applications[edit]

Acceptance and commitment therapy[edit]

RFT has been argued to be central to the development of the psychotherapeutic tradition known as acceptance and commitment therapy and clinical behavior analysis more generally.[22] Indeed, the psychologist Steven C Hayes was involved with the creation of both acceptance and commitment therapy and RFT, and has credited them as inspirations for one another.[23] However, the extent and exact nature of the interaction between RFT as basic behavioral science and applications such as ACT has been an ongoing point of discussion within the field.[24][25]

Gender constructs[edit]

Queer theorist and ACT therapist Alex Stitt observed how relational frames within a person's language development inform their cognitive associations pertaining to gender identity, gender role, and gender expression.[26] How rigid or flexible a person is with their relational frames, Stitt proposed, will determine how adaptable their concept of gender is within themselves, and how open they are to gender diversity. Children, for example, may adhere to the rigid hierarchical frame "males are boys, and boys have short hair" leading to the false inference that anyone who has short hair is male. Likewise, children may adhere to oppositional frames, leading to false notions like the opposite of a lemon is a lime, the opposite of a cat is a dog, or the opposite of a man is a woman. Stitt observes that adults struggling with gender related issues within themselves, often hyperfocus on causal frames in an attempt to explain gender variance, or frames of comparison and distinction, potentially resulting in feelings of isolation and alienation.[26]

Autism spectrum disorder[edit]

RFT provides conceptual and procedural guidance for enhancing the cognitive and language development capability (through its detailed treatment and analysis of derived relational responding and the transformation of function) of early intensive behavior intervention (EIBI) programs for young children with autism and related disorders.[19] The Promoting the Emergence of Advanced Knowledge (PEAK) Relational Training System is heavily influenced by RFT.[27]

Evolution science[edit]

More recently, RFT has also been proposed as a way to guide discussion of language processes within evolution science, whether within evolutionary biology or evolutionary psychology, toward a more informed understanding of the role of language in shaping human social behavior. The effort at integrating RFT into evolution science has been led by, among others, Steven C. Hayes, a co-developer of RFT, and David Sloan Wilson, an evolutionary biologist at Binghamton University. For example, in 2011, Hayes presented at a seminar at Binghamton, on the topic of "Symbolic Behavior, Behavioral Psychology, and the Clinical Importance of Evolution Science",[28] while Wilson likewise presented at a symposium at the annual conference in Parma, Italy, of the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science, the parent organization sponsoring RFT research, on the topic of "Evolution for Everyone, Including Contextual Psychology".[29] Hayes, Wilson, and colleagues have recently linked RFT to the concept of a symbotype[30] and an evolutionarily sensible way that relational framing could have developed has been described.[31]

Hayes, Steven C.; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot; Roche, Bryan, eds. (2001). Relational Frame Theory: A Post-Skinnerian Account of Human Language and Cognition. New York: Kluwer Academic/. doi:10.1007/b108413. ISBN 978-0306466007. OCLC 46633963.

Plenum Publishers

Hayes, Steven C.; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot; Roche, Bryan (April 2003). . The Analysis of Verbal Behavior. 19 (1): 39–54. doi:10.1007/BF03392981. PMC 2755418. PMID 22477255.

"Behavior analysis, relational frame theory, and the challenge of human language and cognition: a reply to the commentaries on Relational frame theory: a post-Skinnerian account of human language and cognition"

Hughes, Sean; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot (2016). "Relational frame theory: the basic account". In Zettle, Robert D.; Hayes, Steven C.; Barnes-Holmes, Dermot; Biglan, Anthony (eds.). The Wiley handbook of contextual behavioral science. Chichester, UK; Malden, MA: . pp. 129–178. doi:10.1002/9781118489857.ch8. ISBN 9781118489567. OCLC 920735550.

Wiley-Blackwell

Skinner, B. F. (March 1989). . Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior. 51 (2): 287–290. doi:10.1901/jeab.1989.51-287. PMC 1338857.

"Review of Hull's Principles of behavior"

Törneke, Niklas (2010). Learning RFT: an introduction to relational frame theory and its clinical applications. Oakland, CA: Context Press.  9781572249066. OCLC 502034176.

ISBN

of the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science, which is one of the organizations that most commonly presents new work in RFT

Official website

(free, multimedia, open-access, online tutorial)]

An Introduction to Relational Frame Theory