Bell, M. C. (1999).
Pavlovian contingencies and resistance to change in a multiple schedule.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
72, 81-96.
According to theoretical accounts of behavioral momentum, the
Pavlovian stimulusreinforcer contingency determines
resistance to change. To assess this prediction, 8 pigeons were
exposed to an unsignaled delay-of-reinforcement schedule (a
tandem variable-interval fixed-time schedule), a signaled
delay-of-reinforcement schedule (a chain variable-interval
fixed-time schedule), and an immediate, zero-delay schedule of
reinforcement in a three-component multiple schedule. The
unsignaled delay and signaled delay schedules employed equal
fixed-time delays, with the only difference being a stimulus
change in the signaled delay schedule. Overall rates of
reinforcement were equated for the three schedules. The Pavlovian
contingency was identical for the unsignaled and immediate
schedules, and responsereinforcer contiguity was degraded
for the unsignaled schedule. Results from two disruption
procedures (prefeeding subjects prior to experimental sessions
and adding a variable-time schedule to timeout periods separating
baseline components) demonstrated that responsereinforcer
contiguity does play a role in determining resistance to change.
The results from the extinction manipulation were not as clear.
Responding in the unsignaled delay component was consistently
less resistant to change than was responding in both the
immediate and presignaled segments of the signaled delay
components, contrary to the view that Pavlovian contingencies
determine resistance to change. Probe tests further supported the
resistance-to-change results, indicating consistency between
resistance to change and preference, both of which are putative
measures of response strength.
Key words: behavioral momentum theory, resistance to change,
Pavlovian versus operant contingencies, multiple schedules, key
peck, pigeons