Okouchi, H. (2003).
Effects of differences in interreinforcer intervals between past and current schedules on fixed-interval responding.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
79, 49-64.
Undergraduates were exposed to a mixed fixed-ratio
differential-reinforcement-of-low-rate schedule. Values of the
schedule components were adjusted so that interreinforcer
intervals in one component were longer than those in another
component. Following this, a mixed fixed-interval 5-s
fixed-interval 20-s schedule (Experiment 1) or six fixed-interval
schedules in which the values ranged from 5 to 40 s (Experiment
2) were in effect. In both experiments, response rates under the
fixed-interval schedules were higher when the interreinforcer
intervals approximated those produced under the fixed-ratio
schedule, whereas the rates were lower when the interreinforcer
intervals approximated those produced under the
different-reinforcement-of-low-rate schedule. The present results
demonstrate that the effects of behavioral history were under
control of the interreinforcer intervals as discriminative
stimuli.
Key words: behavioral history, interreinforcement intervals, mixed schedules,
tandem schedules, fixed-interval schedules, screen touch, humans