Discrimination between reinforced action patterns in the rat |
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Authors: | M.J Morgan D.J Nicholas |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Durham, England;2. University of Cambridge, England |
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Abstract: | Laboratory rats were rewarded for face-washing, rearing, or scratching by being given the opportunity to press retractable levers for food reward. Yoked control animals received the same number of lever presentations and food rewards, but did not have to face-wash, rear, or scratch to obtain the levers. The experimental animals showed increases in number of bouts of reinforced target behavior above control levels, and the total amount of time spent face-washing increased when a 1.5-sec criterion for reinforced bout length was introduced. The activities in this experiment were made to serve a discriminative as well as an instrumental function, since the cue to tell the rat which lever to press for reward when the levers were presented was the activity that the rat had engaged in to obtain lever presentation. In two separate experiments high levels of discrimination between behaviors were obtained. Discrimination was worse following scratching than after other actions, and scratching also showed relatively poor instrumental conditioning. The relationship between Pavlovian and instrumental conditioning processes in this situation is discussed. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to M. J. Morgan Psychology Department University of Durham Science Labs South Road Durham DH1 3LE England. |
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