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Response strength and temporal control in fixed-interval schedules
Authors:Randolph C Grace  John A Nevin
Institution:(1) Department of Psychology, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Victoria Street West, Auckland, 1142, New Zealand;(2) Psychology Department, Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA;(3) Department of Psychology, Utah State University, 2810 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322, USA
Abstract:Pigeons responded in a two-component peak procedure in which the components differed in terms of reinforcement magnitude (Experiment 1), immediacy (Experiment 2), or probability (Experiment 3). The prediction of behavioral momentum theory that responding in the relatively richer component should be more resistant to change was tested by (1) presenting response-independent food in the intervals between components according to a variable-time (VT) schedule, (2) prefeeding, and (3) extinction. In all the experiments, peak location in baseline occurred earlier, relative to the schedule value in the richer component. Peak response rate was more resistant to change in the richer component during the VT and prefeeding tests, and change in peak rate was more sensitive to differential reinforcement than change in overall response rate. Changes in measures of performance on peak trials during the disruptor tests were partially consistent with predictions of the behavioral theory of timing. The results suggest that peak response rate provides a more sensitive index of resistance to change for fixed-interval schedules than does overall response rate and that reinforcement strengthens both peak responding and temporal control.
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