Cohen, S. L. (1998).
Behavioral momentum: The effects of the temporal separation of rates of reinforcement.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
69, 29-47.
In Part 1 of the experiment, rats responded under a
variable-interval (VI) 30-s schedule and a VI 120-s schedule,
with each in effect for a block of consecutive sessions. That is,
the two VI schedules were presented in successive conditions. In
Part 2 the VI schedules alternated each day, and in Part 3 the
schedules alternated within the session as a multiple schedule.
For half of the rats in Parts 1 and 2, the VI schedule alternated
every few minutes within the session with a stimulus that
signaled extinction. For each part, once response rates had
stabilized, resistance to change was measured by prefeeding and
extinction. When the schedules were examined in successive
conditions (Part 1), resistance to extinction was greater under
the VI 120-s schedule of reinforcement than under the VI 30-s
schedule, but no consistent differences in resistance to
prefeeding were observed between the two VI schedules. When the
VI schedules alternated each day (Part 2), resistance to
extinction was greater under the VI 120-s schedule. However, no
consistent differences in resistance to prefeeding were observed
between the VI schedules without extinction in Group A, but
resistance to prefeeding was greater under the VI 30-s schedule
for rats with the added extinction component in Group B. When the
VI schedules alternated within the session as a multiple schedule
(Part 3), resistance to extinction and resistance to prefeeding
were greater under the VI 30-s schedule. The data suggest that
different rates of reinforcement, and their accompanying
discriminative stimuli, must be compared within the same session
(or at least on alternate days) to produce data consistent with
the behavioral momentum model.
Key words: behavioral momentum, resistance to change, extinction,
simple schedules, multiple schedules, lever press, rats