Schaal, D. W., Shahan, T. A., Kovera, C. A., & Reilly, M. P. (1998).
Mechanisms underlying the effects of unsignaled delayed reinforcement on key pecking of pigeons under variable-interval schedules.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
69, 103-122.
Three experiments were conducted to test an interpretation of the
response-rate-reducing effects of unsignaled nonresetting delays
to reinforcement in pigeons. According to this interpretation,
rates of key pecking decrease under these conditions because key
pecks alternate with hopper-observing behavior. In Experiment 1,
4 pigeons pecked a food key that raised the hopper provided that
pecks on a different variable-interval-schedule key met the
requirements of a variable-interval 60-s schedule. The stimuli
associated with the availability of the hopper (i.e., houselight
and keylight off, food key illuminated, feedback following
food-key pecks) were gradually removed across phases while the
dependent relation between hopper availability and
variable-interval-schedule key pecks was maintained. Rates of
pecking the variable-interval-schedule key decreased to low
levels and rates of food-key pecks increased when
variable-interval-schedule key pecks did not produce
hopper-correlated stimuli. In Experiment 2, pigeons initially
pecked a single key under a variable-interval 60-s schedule. Then
the dependent relation between hopper presentation and key pecks
was eliminated by arranging a variable-time 60-s schedule. When
rates of pecking had decreased to low levels, conditions were
changed so that pecks during the final 5 s of each interval
changed the keylight color from green to amber. When pecking
produced these hopper-correlated stimuli, pecking occurred at
high rates, despite the absence of a peck-food dependency. When
peck-produced changes in keylight color were uncorrelated with
food, rates of pecking fell to low levels. In Experiment 3,
details (obtained delays, interresponse-time distributions,
eating times) of the transition from high to low response rates
produced by the introduction of a 3-s unsignaled delay were
tracked from session to session in 3 pigeons that had been
initially trained to peck under a conventional variable-interval
60-s schedule. Decreases in response rates soon after the
transition to delayed reinforcement were accompanied by decreases
in eating times and alterations in interresponse-time
distributions. As response rates decreased and became stable,
eating times increased and their variability decreased. These
findings support an interpretation of the effects of delayed
reinforcement that emphasizes the importance of hopper-observing
behavior.
Key words: observing behavior, superstitious behavior, unsignaled
delay of reinforcement, variable-interval schedules,
variable-time schedules, key peck, pigeon