Mazur, J.E. (2006).
Choice between single and multiple reinforcers in concurrent-chains schedules.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 86, 211-222.
Pigeons responded on concurrent-chains schedules with equal variable-interval schedules as initial links.
One terminal link delivered a single reinforcer after a fixed delay, and the other terminal link delivered
either three or five reinforcers, each preceded by a fixed delay. Some conditions included a postreinforcer
delay after the single reinforcer to equate the total durations of the two terminal links, but other conditions
did not include such a postreinforcer delay. With short initial links, preference for the single-reinforcer
alternative decreased when a postreinforcer delay was present, but with long initial links, the postreinforcer
delays had no significant effect on preference. In conditions with a postreinforcer delay, preference for the
single-reinforcer alternative frequently switched from above 50% to below 50% as the initial links were lengthened.
This pattern of results was consistent with delay-reduction theory (Squires & Fantino, 1971), but not with the
contextual-choice model (Grace, 1994) or the hyperbolic value-added model (Mazur, 2001) as they have usually
been applied. However, the hyperbolic value-added model could account for the results if its calculations were
expanded to include reinforcers delivered in later terminal links. The implications of these findings for
models of concurrent-chains performance are discussed.
Key words: concurrent chains, multiple reinforcers, delay-reduction theory, contextual-choice model, hyperbolic value-added model, key peck, pigeons