Lalli, J. S., Mauro, B. C., & Mace, F. C. (2000).
Preference for unreliable reinforcement in children with mental retardation: The role of conditioned reinforcement.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
33, 533-544.
We examined the effects of conditioned reinforcement on
children's choice between reliable (100%) and unreliable (50%)
reinforcement under various stimulus conditions in a
concurrent-chains procedure. The study was conducted across three
experiments. Experiments 1 and 2 were conducted under conditions
similar to basic laboratory work and consisted of participants
selecting from one of two black boxes (placed on a table) that
were correlated with different reinforcement schedules. In
Experiment 3, we assessed a participant's preference for
unreliable reinforcement during conditions in which the target
responses were aggression and mands. Results of the three
experiments showed that the participants preferred unreliable
reinforcement under certain conditions. Findings are discussed
regarding the role of specific stimuli (i.e., items correlated
with a reinforcement schedule, adult reactions) as conditioned
reinforcers and how they may influence children's preference for
a response (e.g., aggression, self-injury) that produces
reinforcement on a leaner schedule than a socially desirable
response (e.g., mands).
DESCRIPTORS: _conditioned reinforcement, unreliable reinforcement,
choice, delay to reinforcement