Elliffe, D., & Alsop, B. (1996).
Concurrent choice: Effects of overall reinforcer rate and the temporal distribution of reinforcers.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
65, 445-463.
Six pigeons responded on a series of concurrent exponential
variable-interval schedules, offering a within-subject comparison
with previously published data from concurrent arithmetic
variable-interval schedules. Both relative and overall reinforcer
rates were varied between conditions. The generalized matching
law described the data well, with undermatching much more
frequent than strict matching. Time-allocation sensitivity
consistently exceeded response-allocation sensitivity for both
schedule types, and exponential-schedule sensitivity exceeded
arithmetic-schedule sensitivity for both measures of choice. A
further set of conditions using variable-interval schedules whose
shortest interval was correlated with the mean interval, like
arithmetic schedules, but that provided a constant conditional
probability of reinforcement, like exponential schedules,
produced sensitivities between those produced by conventional
arithmetic and exponential schedules. Unlike previous
arithmetic-schedule results, exponential sensitivity changed
nonmonotonically with changes in overall reinforcer rate. The
results clarify our knowledge of the effects of arithmetic and
exponential schedules but confuse our understanding of the
effects of overall reinforcer rate on concurrent choice.
Key words: concurrent choice, generalized matching, shortest
interval, sensitivity to reinforcer rate, arithmetic and
exponential schedules, key peck, pigeon