Publication | Open Access
ON THE EFFECTS OF SIGNALING REINFORCER PROBABILITY AND MAGNITUDE IN DELAYED MATCHING TO SAMPLE
23
Citations
30
References
2005
Year
Reinforcer ProbabilityBehavioral SciencesExperimental Decision MakingBehavioral NeuroscienceMatching TechniqueBiasWheat AccessBehavioral MeasurementAnimal BehaviorSocial SciencesVariable Retention IntervalBehavioral PrincipleAttentionPublic HealthExperimental PsychologyStatisticsPsychologyExperimental Analysis Of Behavior
Two experiments examined whether postsample signals of reinforcer probability or magnitude affected the accuracy of delayed matching to sample in pigeons. On each trial, red or green choice responses that matched red or green stimuli seen shortly before a variable retention interval were reinforced with wheat access. In Experiment 1, the reinforcer probability was either 0.2 or 1.0 for both red and green responses. Reinforcer probability was signaled by line or cross symbols that appeared after the sample had been presented. In Experiment 2, all correct responses were reinforced, and the signaled reinforcer durations were 1.0 s and 4.5 s. Matching was more accurate when larger or more probable reinforcers were signaled, independently of retention interval duration. Because signals were presented postsample, the effects were not the result of differential attention to the sample.
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