Doughty, A. H., & Lattal, K. A. (2001).
Resistance to change of operant variation and repetition.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
76, 195-215.
A multiple chained schedule was used to compare the relative
resistance to change of variable and fixed four-peck response
sequences in pigeons. In one terminal link, a response sequence
produced food only if it occurred infrequently relative to 15
other response sequences (vary). In the other terminal link, a
single response sequence produced food (repeat). Identical
variable-interval schedules operated in the initial links. During
baseline, lower response rates generally occurred in the vary
initial link, and similar response and reinforcement rates
occurred in each terminal link. Resistance of responding to
prefeeding and three rates of response-independent food delivered
during the intercomponent intervals then was compared between
components. During each disruption condition, initial- and
terminal-link response rates generally were more resistant in the vary
component than in the repeat component. During the
response-independent food conditions, terminal-link response
rates were more resistant than initial-link response rates in
each component, but this did not occur during prefeeding.
Variation (in vary) and repetition (in repeat) both decreased
during the response-independent food conditions in the respective
components, but with relatively greater disruption in repeat.
These results extend earlier findings demonstrating that operant
variation is more resistant to disruption than is operant
repetition and suggest that theories of response strength, such
as behavioral momentum theory, must consider factors other than
reinforcement rate. The implications of the results for
understanding operant response classes are discussed.
Key words: resistance to change, behavioral variability,
behavioral repetition, response strength, operant response class,
key peck, pigeons