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Choice, rate of reinforcement, and the changeover delay

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TLDR
The present study shows that equality between proportions of responses and proportions of reinforcements ("matching") is obtained when the value of the changeover delay is varied.
Abstract
Pigeons distribute their responses on concurrently available variable-interval schedules in the same proportion as reinforcements are distributed on the two schedules only when a changeover delay is used. The present study shows that this equality between proportions of responses and proportions of reinforcements (“matching”) is obtained when the value of the changeover delay is varied. When responses are partitioned into the set of rapid response bursts occurring during the delay interval and the set of responses occurring subsequently, the proportion of neither set of responses matches the proportion of reinforcements. Instead, each set deviates from matching but in opposite directions. Matching on the gross level results from the interaction of two patterns evident in the local response rates: (I) the lengthening of the changeover delay response burst is accompanied by a commensurate decrease in the number of changeovers; (2) the changeover delay response burst is longer than the scheduled delay duration. When delay responses are eliminated by introducing a blackout during the delay interval, response matching is eliminated; the pigeon, however, continues to match the proportion of time spent responding on a key to the proportion of reinforcements obtained on that key.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Short-component multiple schedules: effects of relative reinforcement duration

TL;DR: Both rapid alternation and spatial separation of components were necessary to produce approximate matching of relative responding to relative reinforcement duration in pigeons when relative rate of reinforcement is manipulated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concurrent schedules of reinforcement: effects of gradual and abrupt increases in changeover delay.

TL;DR: The relative performance measures (relative time and relative responding) approximated the actual relative rate of reinforcement, with a maximum discrepancy of 11%, over all changeover delay values investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Demonstration of basic concurrent-schedules effects with dogs: choice between different amounts of food.

TL;DR: The results showed that the dogs "undermatch" when the ratio of their responses on the two levers is plotted against the ratios of the amounts of food they produced by responding on those levers, and the approximation to matching seems little affected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Response-rate invariance in concurrent schedules: effects of different changeover contingencies

TL;DR: The present data question the generality of previous reports that the rate of one response is independent of the amount of time allocated to the alternative response.
Journal ArticleDOI

Free-operant choice behavior: A molecular analysis.

TL;DR: The results indicate that excessive switching can complicate the interpretation of data from concurrent chains much as from simple concurrent schedules, and that using blackouts to control switching may be preferable to using a changeover delay.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Relative and absolute strength of response as a function of frequency of reinforcement

TL;DR: The present experiment is a study of strength of response of pigeons on a concurrent schedule under which they peck at either of two response-keys and investigates output as a function of frequency of reinforcement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concurrent performances: reinforcement interaction and response independence.

TL;DR: When a pigeon's pecks on two keys were reinforced concurrently by two independent variable-interval (VI) schedules, one for each key, the response rate on either key was given by the equation: R(1)=R(1)/(r(1)+r(2))(5/6), where R is response rate, r is reinforcement rate, and the subscripts 1 and 2 indicate keys 1 and 1.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changeover delay and concurrent schedules: some effects on relative performance measures

TL;DR: The pigeon and the rat partition total response output between both schedules of a concurrent variable-interval pair is studied and the quantitative nature of a partition seems critically dependent on the relative rates with which the two schedules provide reinforcements for responding, in addition to the changeover delay.
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