Alsop, B. & Porritt, M. (2006).
Discriminability and sensitivity to reinforcer magnitude in a detection task.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 85, 41-
56.
.
Three pigeons discriminated between two sample stimuli (intensities of red
light). The difficulty of the discrimination was varied over four levels. At
each level, the relative reinforcer magnitude for the two correct responses was
varied across conditions, and the reinforcer rates were equal. Within levels,
discriminability between the sample stimuli did not change systematically as
reinforcer magnitude varied. Across levels, the sensitivity of behavior to
changes in the reinforcer-magnitude ratio decreased as the discriminability
between the sample stimuli increased. Subsequent analysis showed that this
relation was limited to performance following only one of the sample stimuli,
the dim red light that remained constant across all conditions. Extant
behavioral models of signal detection cannot easily accommodate these results.
Key words: signal detection, sensitivity, discriminability, reinforcer
magnitude, key peck, pigeon