Lattal, K. A., Reilly, M. P., & Kohn, J. P. (1998).
Response persistence under ratio and interval reinforcement schedules.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
70, 165-183.
In Experiment 1, rats were exposed to progressive-ratio schedules
of food reinforcement while other rats were exposed
simultaneously to yoked-interval schedules that arranged
equivalent interreinforcer intervals but required only a single
response at the end of the interval for food delivery. In
Experiment 2, a within-subject yoked-control procedure was
employed in which pigeons were exposed to alternating sessions
(one per day) of progressive-ratio schedules and yoked-interval
schedules as described above. In both experiments, responding
under the yoked- interval schedule persisted beyond the point at
which responding under the progressive-ratio schedule had ceased.
The progressive-ratio schedules controlled break-and-run
distributions, and the yoked-interval schedules controlled more
even distributions of responses in time. Response rates decreased
and postreinforcement pauses increased over time within
individual sessions under both schedules. The results suggest
that responding maintained by interval schedules is more
persistent than that maintained by ratio schedules. The
limitations and implications of this conclusion are discussed in
the context of other investigations of response strength and
behavioral momentum.
Key words: progressive ratio, yoked interval, response
persistence, lever press, key peck, rats, pigeons