Thomas S. Critchfield, Rebecca Haley, Benjamin Sabo, Jorie Colbert, & Georgette Macropoulis (2003).
A half century of scalloping in the work habits of the United States Congress.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
36, 465-486.
It has been suggested that the work environment of the United States Congress bears similarity
to a fixed-interval reinforcement schedule. Consistent with this notion, Weisberg and Waldrop
(1972) described a positively accelerating pattern in annual congressional bill production
(selected years from 1947 to 1968) that is reminiscent of the scalloped response pattern often
attributed to fixed-interval schedules, but their analysis is now dated and does not bear on the
functional relations that might yield scalloping. The present study described annual congressional
bill production over a period of 52 years and empirically evaluated predictions derived from
four hypotheses about the mechanisms that underlie scalloping. Scalloping occurred reliably in
every year. The data supported several predictions about congressional productivity based on
fixed-interval schedule performance, but did not consistently support any of three alternative
accounts. These findings argue for the external validity of schedule-controlled operant behavior
as measured in the laboratory. The present analysis also illustrates a largely overlooked role for
applied behavior analysis: that of shedding light on the functional properties of behavior in
uncontrolled settings of considerable interest to the public.
DESCRIPTORS: fixed-interval schedule, U.S. Congress, bill enactment