Abstract

Rats were trained to go to one side of a T-maze with delays of reward lasting 1, 20, or 60 min in Expt 1 and 1 or 60 min in Expt 2. Mediation by secondary reward was prevented by administering the same delay treatment regardless of whether the response was correct or incorrect: after a response, the rat was removed from the choice alley and placed in its home cage to spend the delay. Feedback for the response was given in the startbox after the delay interval ended. The rats learned and there were no significant differences in performance among groups trained with different delays. These results had been expected on the basis of Revusky's (1971) hypothesis that removal of the rat from the learning situation to spend the delay elsewhere facilitates long delay learning by reducing associative interference. In Expt 3, this notion was tested explicitly by varying the amount of a 2-min delay to be spent in the experimental situation. Different groups of rats were left in the choice alley after the response for 0, 15, or 60 sec; then the rats were removed to spend the remainder of the 2-min delay in the home cage As predicted, the level of performance decreased as the length of time in the choice alley was increased.

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