Publication | Open Access
SELF‐CONTROL IN PIGEONS UNDER THE MISCHEL PARADIGM
177
Citations
13
References
1981
Year
Wait IntervalWalter MischelEducationBehavior AnalysisPreferred ReinforcerSocial SciencesPsychologyCognitive DevelopmentBehavioral PrincipleConditioningAdaptive BehaviorBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceExperimental PsychologyExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorAnimal BehaviourSocial BehaviorAnimal Behavior
Walter Mischel studied self-control in preschool children in the following manner: if the child waited for an interval to end, he or she received the more preferred of two reinforcers; if the child responded to terminate the interval by ringing a bell, the less preferred reinforcer was given. We used an analogous procedure to study self-control in pigeons: if the bird waited for a trial to end, it received the more preferred reinforcer; if the bird terminated the trial by pecking a key, the less preferred reinforcer was given. We explored the effects on self-control of a number of variables analogous to those studied by Mischel and co-workers, e.g., presence versus absence of reinforcers, of alternative responses, and of stimuli during the wait interval; prior experience of the subjects; and test paradigm. The results obtained with pigeons paralleled the results obtained by Mischel with human children.
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