Williams, B. A., & Bell, M. C. (1996).
Changeover behavior and preference in concurrent schedules.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
65, 513-526.
Pigeons were trained on a multiple schedule of reinforcement in
which separate concurrent schedules occurred in each of two
components. Key pecking was reinforced with milo. During one
component, a variable-interval 40-s schedule was concurrent with
a variable-interval 20-s schedule; during the other component, a
variable-interval 40-s schedule was concurrent with a
variable-interval 80-s schedule. During probe tests, the stimuli
correlated with the two variable-interval 40-s schedules were
presented simultaneously to assess preference, measured by the
relative response rates to the two stimuli. In Experiment 1, the
concurrently available variable-interval 20-s schedule operated
normally; that is, reinforcer availability was not signaled.
Following this baseline training, relative response rate during
the probes favored the variable-interval 40-s alternative that
had been paired with the lower valued schedule (i.e., with the
variable-interval 80-s schedule). In Experiment 2, a signal for
reinforcer availability was added to the high-value alternative
(i.e., to the variable-interval 20-s schedule), thus reducing the
rate of key pecking maintained by that schedule but leaving the
reinforcement rate unchanged. Following that baseline training,
relative response rates during probes favored the
variable-interval 40-s alternative that had been paired with the
higher valued schedule. The reversal in the pattern of preference
implies that the pattern of changeover behavior established
during training, and not reinforcement rate, determined the
preference patterns obtained on the probe tests.
Key words: matching law, concurrent schedules, changeover
behavior, probability of reinforcement, choice theory,
melioration theory, variable-interval schedules, key peck,
pigeons