Publication | Open Access
STIMULUS CONTROL OF RESPONDENT AND OPERANT KEY PECKING: A SINGLE KEY PROCEDURE
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Citations
17
References
1981
Year
Motor ControlAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyResponse KeyBehavioral PrinciplePublic HealthConditioningClear DissociationBehavioral SciencesOperant BehaviorExperimental PsychologyPerception-action LoopExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorAnimal BehaviourSingle Key ProcedureSensorimotor TransformationNeuroscienceAnimal Behavior
Pigeons' responses to a uniformly illuminated response key were either reinforced on a variable-interval one-minute schedule of reinforcement or extinguished for one-minute periods. When 1.5 second signals were presented at the beginning of each component, so as to differentially predict reinforcement, the pigeons pecked at the signals, at rates higher than rates during the remainder of the component. When the brief signals were not differentially predictive of reinforcement, pecking in their presence decreased to near zero levels. Similar results were obtained with signals based upon colors and upon line orientations. Changes in rates of (unreinforced) pecking occurred during the signal whether pigeons responded differentially during the remainder of the component or not. Experiment II demonstrated that the presence of the signal correlated with extinction was not necessary for pecking to develop at the signal which preceded the component in which responding was intermittently reinforced. The experiments demonstrated a clear dissociation of respondent control from operant control of a response. In addition, operant behavior was shown to be relatively insensitive to differing rates of reinforcement, as compared to the sensitivity of respondent behavior to differing rates of reinforcement produced by the very same operant behavior.
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