Hake, D. F., Olivera, D., & Bell, J. C. (1975).
Switching from competition to sharing or cooperation at large response requirements: Competition requires more responding.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
24, 343-354.
Two pairs of high-school students matched-to-sample for money. On
each trial, a subject could either respond on one lever to take
the matching-to-sample problem himself (taking response) or
respond on a second lever to give the problem to his coactor
(giving response). The first subject to complete the response
requirement determined the distribution of the problem.
Competition maximizes the amount of responding over trials, i.e.,
both subjects make taking responses on each trial. Sharing and
cooperation minimize responding: only one subject makes a taking
response (sharing) or a giving response (cooperation) on each
trial, and the subjects alternate responding such that there is
an equitable distribution of responses and reinforcers over
trials. Large increases in the fixed-ratio response requirement
to distribute problems produced: (1) a switch from competition to
sharing or cooperation, (2) the expected concomitant change from
inequitable to equitable distributions of reinforcers, and (3) a
reduction in the amount of responding for three of the four
subjects. Previous animal research has shown that large response
requirements may have aversive properties. Switching from
competition to sharing or cooperation at large response
requirements allows a reduction in responding and, at the same
time, a moderate number of reinforcers for each subject.