The copyist model and the shaping view of reinforcement

•Summarized a brief history of strengthening and shaping view of reinforcement.•The copyist model belongs to the family of accounts based on the shaping view.•Evaluated how well the copyist model explains VR–VI rate difference and the matching law.•Future work should be directed at a model which com...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioural processes 2015-05, Vol.114, p.72-77
Hauptverfasser: Tanno, Takayuki, Silberberg, Alan, Sakagami, Takayuki
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container_title Behavioural processes
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creator Tanno, Takayuki
Silberberg, Alan
Sakagami, Takayuki
description •Summarized a brief history of strengthening and shaping view of reinforcement.•The copyist model belongs to the family of accounts based on the shaping view.•Evaluated how well the copyist model explains VR–VI rate difference and the matching law.•Future work should be directed at a model which combine the strengths of the strengthening and shaping views. The strengthening view of reinforcement attributes behavior change to changes in the response strength or the value of the reinforcer. In contrast, the shaping view explains behavior change as shaping different response units through differential reinforcement. In this paper, we evaluate how well these two views explain: (1) the response-rate difference between variable-ratio and variable-interval schedules that provide the same reinforcement rate; and (2) the phenomenon of matching in choice. The copyist model (Tanno and Silberberg, 2012) – a shaping-view account – can provided accurate predictions of these phenomena without a strengthening mechanism; however, the model has limitations. It cannot explain the relation between behavior change and stimulus control, reinforcer amount, and reinforcer quality. These relations seem easily explained by a strengthening view. Future work should be directed at a model which combine the strengths of these two types of accounts.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.beproc.2015.02.009
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete - AutoHoldings; MEDLINE
subjects Animals
Choice Behavior
Concurrent schedule
Copyist model
Models, Psychological
Reinforcement (Psychology)
Shaping view
Strengthening view
Variable interval
Variable ratio
title The copyist model and the shaping view of reinforcement
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