Abstract

In two experiments, rats were trained initially on a recycling conjunctive schedule in which a food pellet was delivered after 30 s provided at least one response had occurred; otherwise the next cycle began immediately. This produced low rate responding characterized by either a pause-respond-pause pattern or else a pause-respond pattern. The schedule then was changed so that half of the intervals ended with the presentation of a brief stimulus instead of food. Patterning after food was little affected, whereas patterning after the brief stimulus varied across rats. Generally, a short pause after the brief stimulus was followed by an initial increase in responding that led to either a fairly constant rate, or else to a decrease in rate throughout the interval. In later conditions, when the incidence of response-food and response- stimulus contiguity were manipulated separately, only the former increased response rate; this was so even when the brief stimulus was paired with food in some conditions. Rate increases were accompanied by changes in patterning across all intervals. These results do not support a simple conditioned reinforcement interpretation of the control acquired by a brief stimulus on a second-order schedule with fixed-interval components. Rather, they suggest that a number of interrelated variables combine to maintain responding. These variables include response-reinforcer contiguity, the temporal location of the response dependency, and the contingency between the brief stimulus and the reinforcer.

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