Terrace, H. S. (1968).
Discrimination learning, the peak shift, and behavioral contrast.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
11, 727-741.
A discrimination between two successively alternating stimuli was
trained under conditions that maintained equal frequencies of
reinforcement in the presence of each of the discriminative
stimuli (S1 and S2) but that also reduced the rate of responding
to S2. These conditions included a multiple variable-interval
differential-reinforcement-of-low-rate schedule and a multiple
variable-interval variable-interval schedule in which responses
to S2 were punished. Whenever the rate of responding to S2 was
reduced, rate of responding to S1 (behavioral contrast)
increased, and the peak of a subsequently obtained generalization
gradient did not occur at the expected location (between S1 and
S2) but was displaced away from S2, below S1. Discrimination
training in which the frequencies of reinforcement earned in S1
and S2 were not equal (variable-interval 1-min variable-interval
5-min training) produced contrast and the peak shift only if the
rate of responding to S2 had been reduced, as after non-
differential reinforcement in which variable-interval 1-min
schedules were correlated with S1 and with S2. It was concluded
that a sufficient condition for the occurrence of behavioral
contrast and the peak shift was reduction of the rate of
responding to one of two alternating discriminative stimuli and
that a peak shift will occur only if contrast had occurred during
discrimination training.