Nevin, J. A., Milo, J., Odum, A. L., & Shahan, T. A. (2003).
Accuracy of discrimination, rate of responding, and resistance to change.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
79, 307-321.
Pigeons were trained on multiple schedules in which responding on
a center key produced matching-to-sample trials according to the
same variable-interval 30-s schedules in both components.
Matching trials consisted of a vertical or tilted line sample on
the center key followed by vertical and tilted comparisons on the
side keys. Correct responses to comparison stimuli were
reinforced with probability .80 in the rich component and .20 in
the lean component. Baseline response rates and matching
accuracies generally were higher in the rich component,
consistent with previous research. When performance was disrupted
by prefeeding, response-independent food during intercomponent
intervals, intrusion of a delay between sample and comparison
stimuli, or extinction, both response rates and matching
accuracies generally decreased. Proportions of baseline response
rate were greater in the rich component for all disrupters except
delay, which had relatively small and inconsistent effects on
response rate. By contrast, delay had large and consistent
effects on matching accuracy, and proportions of baseline
matching accuracy were greater in the rich component for all four
disrupters. The dissociation of response rate and accuracy with
delay reflects the localized impact of delay on matching
performance. The similarity of the data for response rate and
accuracy with prefeeding, response-independent food, and
extinction shows that matching performance, like response rate,
is more resistant to change in a rich than in a lean component.
This result extends resistance to change analyses from the
frequency of response emission to the degree of stimulus control,
and suggests that the strength of discriminating, like the
strength of responding, is positively related to rate of
reinforcement.
Key words: multiple schedules, reinforcer probability, matching-to-sample, response rate, resistance to change, key peck, pigeons