Stubbs, D. A., & Pliskoff, S. S. (1969).
Concurrent responding with fixed relative rate of reinforcement.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
12, 887-895.
Responding by pigeons on one key of a two-key chamber alternated
the color of the second key, on which responding produced food
according to a variable-interval schedule of reinforcement. From
time to time, reinforcement would be available for a response,
but in the presence of a particular stimulus, either red or green
light on the key. Red or green was chosen irregularly from
reinforcement to reinforcement, so that a proportion of the total
number of reinforcements could be specified for each color.
Experimental manipulations involved variations of (1) the
proportions for each color, (2) changeover delay, or,
alternatively, (3) a fixed-ratio changeover requirement. The main
findings were: (1) relative overall rates of responding and
relative times in the presence of a key color approximated the
proportions of reinforcements obtained in the presence of that
color, while relative local rates of responding changed little;
(2) changeover rate decreased as the proportions diverged from
0.50; (3) relative overall rate of responding and relative time
remained constant as the changeover delay was increased from 2 to
32 sec, with reinforcement proportions for red and green of 0.75
and 0.25, but they increased above 0.90 when a fixed-ratio
changeover of 20 responses replaced the changeover delay; (4)
changeover rate decreased as the delay or fixed-ratio was
increased.