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KEY‐PECK PROBABILITY AND TOPOGRAPHY IN A CONCURRENT VARIABLE‐INTERVAL VARIABLE‐INTERVAL SCHEDULE WITH FOOD AND WATER REINFORCERS
Author(s) -
Ploog Bertram O.,
Zeigler H. Philip
Publication year - 1997
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.1997.67-109
Subject(s) - peck (imperial) , reinforcement , food delivery , statistics , key (lock) , duration (music) , interval (graph theory) , schedule , psychology , zoology , mathematics , ecology , computer science , social psychology , biology , art , geometry , literature , marketing , combinatorics , business , operating system
The relation between variables that modulate the probability and the topography of key pecks was examined using a concurrent variable‐interval variable‐interval schedule with food and water reinforcers. Measures of response probability (response rates, time allocation) and topography (peck duration, gape amplitude) were obtained in 5 water‐ and food‐deprived pigeons. Key color signaled reinforcer type. During baseline, response rates and time allocations were greater to the food key than to the water key, and food‐key pecks had larger gapes and shorter durations. Relative probability measures (for the food key) were increased by prewatering and decreased by prefeeding. Deprivation effects upon topography measures were apparent only when food‐ and water‐key pecks were analyzed separately. Food‐key gape amplitudes increased with prewatering and decreased with prefeeding. The clearest effect occurred with prewatering. There were no consistent effects upon water‐key gapes. The key color—reinforcer relation was reversed for 3 pigeons to determine how response topography was modulated during the transition from food‐ to water‐key pecks. Reacquisition was faster for the probability than for the topography measures. Analysis of gape‐amplitude distributions during reversal indicated that response‐form modulation proceeded through the generation of intermediate gape sizes.

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