AUTOSHAPED KEY PECKING MAINTAINED BY ACCESS TO A SOCIAL SPACE

When four experimentally naive pigeons were exposed to occasional forward pairings of a keylight followed by a doorlight (that signaled access to a large social space), all subjects began to peck the lit key. In a second experiment, where the keylight either preceded the presentation of the doorligh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior 1982-09, Vol.38 (2), p.181-189
Hauptverfasser: Peele, David B., Ferster, C. B.
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container_title Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
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Ferster, C. B.
description When four experimentally naive pigeons were exposed to occasional forward pairings of a keylight followed by a doorlight (that signaled access to a large social space), all subjects began to peck the lit key. In a second experiment, where the keylight either preceded the presentation of the doorlight or was presented independently of it, key pecking was maintained only in the former circumstance. The unconditioned stimulus in these experiments—arrival in the social space—did not elicit pecking. Hence, the conditioned response of key pecking and the unconditioned response of entering the social space differed. This demonstration of autoshaping with a social‐space unconditioned stimulus argues against a stimulus‐substitution account of the findings.
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subjects Animals
autoshaping
Columbidae
Conditioning, Classical
Female
key peck
Male
Motor Skills
pigeon
Reinforcement, Social
Social Environment
social reinforcer
stimulus substitution
title AUTOSHAPED KEY PECKING MAINTAINED BY ACCESS TO A SOCIAL SPACE
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