Davison, M., & Nevin, J. A. (1999).
Stimuli, reinforcers, and behavior: An integration.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
71, 439-482.
We propose that a fundamental unit of behavior is the concurrent
discriminated operant, and we discuss in detail a quantitative
model of the concurrent three-term contingency that is based on
the notion that an animal's behavior is controlled to differing
extents by both stimulusbehavior and
behaviorreinforcer relations. We show how this model can
describe performance in a variety of experimental procedures:
conditional discrimination and matching to sample, both with and
without reinforcement for responses that are traditionally
identified as errors; conditional discrimination with more than
two stimuli and choice alternatives; delayed matching to sample
and delayed reinforcement in matching to sample; second-order and
complex conditional discrimination; and multiple and concurrent
schedules. Although the model is incomplete in its coverage, and
may be incorrect, we believe that this conceptual approach will
bear fruit in the development of behavior theory.
Key words: discriminated operant, conditional discrimination,
stimulus control, reinforcement, detection models, matching,
discriminability