Gaynor, S. T., & Shull, R. L. (2002).
The generality of selective observing.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
77, 171-187.
Four rats obtained food pellets by poking a key and 5-s
presentations of the discriminative stimuli by pressing a lever.
Every 1 or 2 min, the prevailing schedule of reinforcement for
key poking alternated between rich (either variable-interval [VI]
30 s or VI 60 s) and lean (either VI 240 s, VI 480 s, or
extinction) components. While the key was dark (mixed-schedule
stimulus), no exteroceptive stimulus indicated the prevailing
schedule. A lever press (i.e., an observing response), however,
illuminated the key for 5 s with either a steady light (S+),
signaling the rich reinforcement schedule, or a blinking light
(S-), signaling the lean reinforcement schedule. One goal was to
determine whether rats would engage in selective observing (i.e.,
a pattern of responding that maintains contact with S+ and
decreases contact with S-). Such a pattern was found, in that a
5-s presentation of S+ was followed relatively quickly by another
observing response (which likely produced another 5-s period of
S+), whereas exposure to S- resulted in extended breaks from
observing. Additional conditions demonstrated that the rate of
observing remained high when lever presses were effective only
when the rich reinforcement schedule was in effect (S+ only
condition), but decreased to a low level when lever presses were
effective only during the lean reinforcement component (S- only
condition) or when lever presses had no effect (in removing the
mixed stimulus or presenting the multiple-schedule stimuli).
These findings are consistent with relativistic
conceptualizations of conditioned reinforcement and extend the
generality of selective observing to procedures in which the
experimenter controls the duration of stimulus presentations, the
schedule components both offer intermittent food reinforcement,
and rats serve as subjects.
Key words: observing behavior, selective observing, conditioned
reinforcement, key poke, rats