Belke, T. W., & Hancock, S. D. (2003).
Responding for sucrose and wheel-running reinforcement: Effects of sucrose concentration and wheel-running reinforcer duration.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
79, 243-265.
Six male albino rats were placed in running wheels and exposed to
a fixed-interval 30-s schedule of lever pressing that produced
either a drop of sucrose solution or the opportunity to run for a
fixed duration as reinforcers. Each reinforcer type was signaled
by a different stimulus. In Experiment 1, the duration of running
was held constant at 15 s while the concentration of sucrose
solution was varied across values of 0, 2.5, 5, 10, and 15%. As
concentration decreased, postreinforcement pause duration
increased and local rates decreased in the presence of the
stimulus signaling sucrose. Consequently, the difference between
responding in the presence of stimuli signaling wheel-running and
sucrose reinforcers diminished, and at 2.5%, response functions
for the two reinforcers were similar. In Experiment 2, the
concentration of sucrose solution was held constant at 15% while
the duration of the opportunity to run was first varied across
values of 15, 45, and 90 s then subsequently across values of 5,
10, and 15 s. As run duration increased, postreinforcement pause
duration in the presence of the wheel-running stimulus increased
and local rates increased then decreased. In summary, inhibitory
aftereffects of previous reinforcers occurred when both sucrose
concentration and run duration varied; changes in responding were
attributable to changes in the excitatory value of the stimuli
signaling the two reinforcers.
Key words: inhibitory aftereffect, excitatory stimulus effect,
wheel running, sucrose, reinforcement, fixed interval,
concentration, duration, lever press, rats