McSweeney, F. K., & Weatherly, J. N. (1998).
Habituation to the reinforcer may contribute to multiple-schedule behavioral contrast.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
69, 199-221.
Habituation to the reinforcer may contribute to multiple-schedule
behavioral contrast. According to this argument, reducing
reinforcers in one component of a multiple schedule reduces
habituation to the reinforcer. Reducing habituation enhances the
value, or effectiveness, of the remaining reinforcers, producing
positive contrast. Enriching the reinforcers in one component
increases habituation to that reinforcer. Increasing habituation
decreases the effectiveness of the reinforcer, producing negative
contrast. Such an idea is simple and parsimonious. It is not
contradicted by any well-established finding in the contrast
literature. It makes several tested and untested predictions that
are unusual. However, habituation cannot explain all contrast. A
complete explanation requires postulating that at least one
additional mechanism, controlled by the conditions of
reinforcement in the following component, also contributes to
contrast.
Key words: behavioral contrast, multiple schedule, within-session
changes in responding, habituation, sensitization,
following-component effect, local contrast