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Visual reinforcement in the female Siamese fighting fish, Betta splendens
Authors:Elcoro Mirari  Silva Stephanie P  Lattal Kennon A
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, West Virginia University, 53 Campus Drive, 1124 Life Sciences Building, Morgantown, WV 6506-6040, USA. Mirari.Elcoro@mail.wvu.edu
Abstract:Operant conditioning with Betta splendens (Bettas) has been investigated extensively using males of the species. Ethological studies of female Bettas have revealed aggressive interactions that qualitatively parallel those between male Bettas. Given these similarities, four experiments were conducted with female Bettas to examine the generality of a widely reported finding with males: mirror-image reinforcement. Swimming through a ring was reinforced by a 10-s mirror presentation. As with males, ring swimming was acquired and maintained when mirror presentations were immediate (Experiments 1, 2, and 3) and delayed (Experiment 4). The failure of conventional extinction (Experiments 1 and 2) and response-independent mirror presentations (Experiment 3) to maintain responding confirmed the reinforcing properties of mirror presentation. These results extend previous findings of mirror images as reinforcers in males of the same species and illustrate a complementarity between behavioral ecology and the experimental analysis of behavior.
Keywords:mirror-image reinforcement   extinction   response-independent mirror presentation   aggression   ring swimming   female Betta splendens
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