Publication | Open Access
CHOICE AND FORAGING
139
Citations
16
References
1982
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingChoice TheorySearch StateBehavior AnalysisSocial SciencesPsychologyChoice ModelExperimental Decision MakingBehavioral PrinciplePublic HealthConditioningDecision TheoryBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceOperant BehaviorExperimental PsychologyExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorBehavioral EconomicsNaive PigeonsForagingHandling StateDecision ScienceAnimal Behavior
In Experiment 1, six naive pigeons were trained on a foraging schedule characterized by different states beginning with a search state in which completion of a fixed-interval on a white key led to a choice state. In the choice state the subject could, by appropriate responding on a fixed ratio of three, either accept or reject the schedule of reinforcement that was offered (either a variable-interval five-second or a variable-interval 20-second). If the subject accepted the schedule, it entered a "handling state" in which the appropriate variable-interval schedule was presented. Completion of the variable-interval schedule produced food. The independent variable was the fixed-interval value in the search state, and the dependent variable was the rate of acceptance of the long variable-interval in the choice state. Experiment 2 was identical except that the search state required completion of a variable-interval, instead of a fixed-interval, schedule. The rate of acceptance of the long variable-interval schedule in both experiments was a direct function of the length of the search state, in accordance with both optimality theory and the delay-reduction hypothesis.
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