Reinforcement of a reinforcing behavior: Effect of sucrose concentration on wheel-running rate

•Operant wheel running produces extrinsic sucrose reinforcement.•Automatic reinforcement of wheel running alters extrinsic reinforcement effect.•Running increases at highest concentrations when ad-lib.•Running increases at all concentrations when deprived.•Functions differ from those with lever pres...

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Veröffentlicht in:Learning and motivation 2017-08, Vol.59, p.47-54
Hauptverfasser: Belke, Terry W., Pierce, W. David, Fisher, Alexandra C., LeCocq, Mandy R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Operant wheel running produces extrinsic sucrose reinforcement.•Automatic reinforcement of wheel running alters extrinsic reinforcement effect.•Running increases at highest concentrations when ad-lib.•Running increases at all concentrations when deprived.•Functions differ from those with lever pressing. Wheel running, unlike typical operant behavior, generates its own automatic reinforcement that alters the control exerted by extrinsic reinforcement on wheel running. The current study investigated the implications of the automatic reinforcement of wheel running by arranging different sucrose concentrations as extrinsic reinforcement for operant wheel running in ad-lib fed and food-deprived rats. Eleven female Long Evans rats ran on fixed revolution 30 schedules that delivered a drop of sucrose solution as reinforcement. Sucrose concentration varied across values of 0%, 2.5%, 5%, 10%, and 15% sucrose (w/v). Results showed that under ad-lib feeding, only the highest concentrations increased operant wheel-running rate. By contrast, under deprivation, all concentrations of sucrose increased the rate of wheel running. Despite the differences in sucrose-reinforced operant wheel-running rates by deprivation level (ad lib vs. deprived), wheel-running rates did not differ at the highest concentrations. Prior research on operant lever pressing, a response generating low (or no) automatic reinforcement, has shown considerably higher lever-pressing rates as a function of increasing amounts of sucrose reinforcement when rats are food deprived. Together, these previous observations and the current study suggest that automatic reinforcement generated by an operant decreases the control exerted by extrinsic reinforcement. Additionally, the regulation by extrinsic reinforcement on automatically reinforcing behavior depends on the organism’s motivation or deprivation level (ad lib vs. deprived).
ISSN:0023-9690
1095-9122
DOI:10.1016/j.lmot.2017.08.004