Bullock, C.E. & Myers, T.M. (2009).
Stimulus-food pairings produce stimulus-directed touch screen responding in
cynomolgus monkeys ( Macaca Fascicularis) with or without a positive response contingency.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 92, 41-55.
Acquisition and maintenance of touch-screen responding was examined in na•ve cynomolgus
monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) under automaintenance and classical conditioning
arrangements. In the first condition of Experiment 1, we compared acquisition of screen
touching to a randomly positioned stimulus (a gray square) that was either
stationary or moving under automaintenance (i.e., banana pellet delivery followed
an 8-s stimulus presentation or immediately upon a stimulus touch). For all
subjects stimulus touching occurred within the first session and increased to at least
50% of trials by the end of four sessions (320 trials). In the subsequent
condition, stimulus touching further increased under a similar procedure in which
pellets were only delivered if a stimulus touch occurred (fixed ratio 1 with
8-s limited hold). In Experiment 2, 6 naive subjects were initially exposed
to a classical conditioning procedure (8-s stimulus preceded pellet
delivery). Despite the absence of a programmed response contingency, all
subjects touched the stimulus within the first session and responded on about
50% or more of trials by the second session. Responding was also sensitive
to negative, neutral, and positive response contingencies introduced in
subsequent conditions. Similar to other species, monkeys engaged in
stimulus-directed behavior when stimulus presentations were paired
with food delivery. However, stimulus-directed behavior quickly
conformed to response contingencies upon subsequent introduction. Video recordings
of sessions showed topographies of stimulus-directed behavior that resembled
food acquisition and consumption.
Key words: response acquisition, autoshaping, automaintenance, negative automaintenance, touch screen, monkey