Publication | Open Access
SCHEDULE‐INDUCED DRINKING AS A FUNCTION OF INTERREINFORCEMENT INTERVAL IN THE RHESUS MONKEY<sup>1</sup>
68
Citations
15
References
1976
Year
Animal PhysiologyBehavioral SciencesBehavioral NeuroscienceSchedule‐induced DrinkingLever PressesPhysiologyRhesus MonkeysNeurosciencePrimate BehaviorPublic HealthExperimental PsychologyAnimal BehaviorFood PelletsSocial SciencesExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorBehavioural Physiology
Lever presses by two rhesus monkeys produced food pellets that were assigned by both an ascending and descending series of fixed-interval schedules whose values varied between 1 and 512 sec. The amount of schedule-induced drinking was bitonically related to interreinforcement interval, reaching a maximum at approximately 120 sec and declining at longer fixed intervals. The relation between water intake and interreinforcement interval was complexly related to two drinking measures: (1) the probability of drinking following a pellet and (2) the amount drunk per bout. Drinking rate was also bitonically related to interreinforcement interval.
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