RESPONSE ACQUISITION WITH DELAYED REINFORCEMENT: A COMPARISON OF TWO-LEVER PROCEDURES

Groups of 8 experimentally naive rats were exposed during 8‐hr sessions to resetting delay procedures in which responses on one lever (the reinforcement lever) produced water after a delay of 8, 16, 32, or 64 s. For rats in one condition, responses on a second (no‐consequences) lever had no programm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior 1998-01, Vol.69 (1), p.17-28
Hauptverfasser: Sutphin, Glen, Byrne, Tom, Poling, Alan
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Groups of 8 experimentally naive rats were exposed during 8‐hr sessions to resetting delay procedures in which responses on one lever (the reinforcement lever) produced water after a delay of 8, 16, 32, or 64 s. For rats in one condition, responses on a second (no‐consequences) lever had no programmed consequences. For rats in another condition, responses on a second (cancellation) lever during a delay initiated by a response on the reinforcement lever prevented delivery of the scheduled reinforcer; responses on the cancellation lever at other times had no programmed consequences. Under both conditions and at all delays, most subjects emitted more responses on the reinforcement lever than did control rats that never received water emitted on either lever. At 8‐s delays, both conditions engendered substantially more responding on the reinforcement lever than on the other lever, and performance closely resembled that of immediate‐reinforcement controls. At delays of 16 and 32 s, however, there was clear differential responding on the two levers under the cancellation condition but not under the other condition. When the delay was 64 s, differential responding on the two levers did not occur consistently under either condition. These findings provide strong evidence that the behavior of rats is sensitive to consequences delayed by 8, 16, and 32 s, but only equivocal evidence of such sensitivity to consequences delayed 64 s. They also indicate that acquisition depends, in part, on the measure of performance used to index it.
ISSN:0022-5002
1938-3711
DOI:10.1901/jeab.1998.69-17