Abstract

In two experiments, the frequency of food reinforcement provided by variable interval (VI) schedules prior to extinction was varied. In the first experiment, two-component multiple schedules resulted in a greater number of responses in extinction in the presence of the stimulus previously associated with the richer of the two component schedules than that previously associated with the leaner schedule. In the second experiment, different groups of animals were trained on different VI schedules. Responding in extinction was analyzed into bouts of responding showing that the number of response bouts increased and the number of responses per bout decreased with decreasing frequency of reinforcement during training. These data are compatible with an analysis of operant behavior based on an analogy to processes that presumably-occur-in naturalistic foraging situations. According to this analogy, behavior associated with search for a food source (i.e., number of response bouts) and that of procurement of food from a source (i.e., responses per bout) represent aspects of behavior that are differentially strengthened by different VI schedules. Extinction serves to reveal this differential strengthening.

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