Roscoe, E. M., Iwata, B. A., & Kahng, S. (1999).
Relative versus absolute reinforcement effects: Implications for preference assessments.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
32, 479-493.
We compared results obtained in two previous studies on
reinforcer identification (Fisher et al., 1992; Pace, Ivancic,
Edwards, Iwata, & Page, 1985) by combining methodologies from
both studies. Eight individuals with mental retardation
participated. During Phase 1, two preference assessments were
conducted, one in which stimuli were presented singly (SS method)
and one in which stimuli were presented in pairs (PS method).
Based on these results, two types of stimuli were identified for
each participant: High-preference (HP) stimuli were those
selected on 75% or more trials during both preference
assessments; low- preference (LP) stimuli were those selected on
100% of the SS trials but on 25% or fewer of the PS trials.
During Phase 2, the reinforcing effects of HP and LP stimuli were
evaluated in reversal designs under two test conditions:
concurrent and single schedules of continuous reinforcement. Two
response options were available under the concurrent-schedule
condition: One response produced access to the HP stimulus; the
other produced access to the LP stimulus. Only one response
option was available under the single-schedule condition, and
that response produced access only to the LP stimulus. Results
indicated that 7 of the 8 participants consistently showed
preference for the HP stimulus under the concurrent schedule.
However, when only the LP stimulus was available during the
single-schedule condition, response rates for 6 of the 7
participants were as high as those observed for the HP stimulus
during the concurrent-schedule condition (1 participant showed
no reinforcement effect). These results indicate that, although
the concurrent-schedule procedure is well suited to the
assessment of relative reinforcement effects (preference for one
reinforcer over another), absolute reinforcement effects
associated with a given stimulus may be best examined under
single-schedule conditions.
DESCRIPTORS: concurrent schedules, preference, reinforcer
assessment