Matthew Porritt, Karen Van Wagner, & Alan Poling. (2009).
Effects of response spacing on acquisition and retention of conditional discriminations.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,
42, 295-307.
Pigeons were exposed to a repeated acquisition procedure in which no
delays were imposed and rate of responding was relatively high. They
also were exposed to conditions in which delays were arranged between
trials within chains or between completed chains, and rates of responding
were lower. Number of trials, rate of reinforcement, difficulty of the
discrimination, and motivating operations were held constant. Terminal
accuracy was highest under the nodelay condition, in which rate of
responding was highest. Effects of trial spacing on retention were mixed
and depended on whether delays were imposed between trials within
chains or between completed chains. These findings provide basic-research
support for the rapid presentation of trials in direct instruction and for rate
building in precision teaching.
DESCRIPTORS: conditional discrimination, fluency, rate building, repeated acquisition of response chains