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TESTS OF BEHAVIOR MOMENTUM IN SIMPLE AND MULTIPLE SCHEDULES WITH RATS AND PIGEONS
Author(s) -
Cohen Steven L.,
Riley Deborah S.,
Weigle Pat A.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1938-3711
pISSN - 0022-5002
DOI - 10.1901/jeab.1993.60-255
Subject(s) - reinforcement , schedule , extinction (optical mineralogy) , statistics , psychology , operant conditioning , mathematics , computer science , social psychology , biology , operating system , paleontology
Four experiments examined the relationship between rate of reinforcement and resistance to change in rats' and pigeons' responses under simple and multiple schedules of reinforcement. In Experiment 1, 28 rats responded under either simple fixed‐ratio, variable‐ratio, fixed‐interval, or variable‐interval schedules; in Experiment 2, 3 pigeons responded under simple fixed‐ratio schedules. Under each schedule, rate of reinforcement varied across four successive conditions. In Experiment 3, 14 rats responded under either a multiple fixed‐ratio schedule or a multiple fixed‐interval schedule, each with two components that differed in rate of reinforcement. In Experiment 4, 7 pigeons responded under either a multiple fixed‐ratio or a multiple fixed‐interval schedule, each with three components that also differed in rate of reinforcement. Under each condition of each experiment, resistance to change was studied by measuring schedule‐controlled performance under conditions with prefeeding, response‐independent food during the schedule or during timeouts that separated components of the multiple schedules, and by measuring behavior under extinction. There were no consistent differences between rats and pigeons. There was no direct relationship between rates of reinforcement and resistance to change when rates of reinforcement varied across successive conditions in the simple schedules. By comparison, in the multiple schedules there was a direct relationship between rates of reinforcement and resistance to change during most tests of resistance to change. The major exception was delivering response‐independent food during the schedule; this disrupted responding, but there was no direct relationship between rates of reinforcement and resistance to change in simple‐ or multiple‐schedule contexts. The data suggest that rate of reinforcement determines resistance to change in multiple schedules, but that this relationship does not hold under simple schedules.

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