Publication | Open Access
EFFECTS OF REINFORCEMENT MAGNITUDE ON CHOICE AND RATE OF RESPONDING<sup>1</sup>
162
Citations
20
References
1967
Year
Behavioral SciencesExperimental Decision MakingBehavioral Decision MakingExperimental PsychologyResponse RatesChoice TheoryManagementReinforcement MagnitudeSocial SciencesReinforcement DurationBehavioral ExperimentsBehavioral PrincipleDecision ScienceDecision TheoryAnimal BehaviorPsychologyExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorBehavioral Economics
Behavior is sometimes insensitive, and sometimes extremely sensitive, to changes in reinforcement magnitude. The present work attempted to analyze this disparity by comparing, in a single experimental situation, a pigeon's choices with its response rates. Whereas choices varied directly with reinforcement duration, rates of responding were comparatively insensitive to duration changes. These results suggest that the effect of reinforcement magnitude on responding partly depends upon the extent to which responding influences the amount of reinforcement.
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