Green, L., & Estle, S. J. (2003).
Preference reversals with food and water reinforcers in rats.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
79, 233-242.
Rats were given a choice between a smaller, immediately available
reward and a larger reward available after a delay. In one phase,
the reward was food and in another phase, the reward was water.
Constant delays were added between the choice presentation and
the delivery of the reward alternatives. As the time between
choice and reward delivery increased from 0 to 25 s, all rats
(except one in the water phase) reversed their preference from
the smaller, sooner alternative to the larger, later alternative.
These findings extend the generality of the preference-reversal
animal model to qualitatively different reinforcers. Furthermore,
the presence of both impulsive and self-control choices within
the same animal is consistent with the view that self-control may
be understood as choice behavior, and that species differences in
self-control may be differences in degree, not kind.
Key words: preference reversals, choice, self-control, amount,
delay, lever-pressing, rat