Abstract
Serial reversals of a spatial discrimination were trained in rats under automaintenance conditions, in which food reward occurred regardless of responding. This automaintained reversal learning was compared to instrumental reversal learning in other rats trained under a similar procedure which required responding for reward. In the automaintenance (AU) procedure, rats received food after every retraction of a “positive” response lever (S +); retraction of a second, “neutral” lever (S°) was not paired with food delivery. Responses to the S + were elicited at fairly constant rates during daily 100-trial conditioning sessions. Responses to the S° occurred early in each session but rapidly diminished across trials. When the valences of the levers were reversed, responding shifted to the new S + and diminished on the new S°. Criterion for reversal was defined as a discrimination ratio (DR) of at least 90% responding to the S + in two consecutive 10-trial blocks. With repeated reversals, acquisition of criterion performance occurred with increasing rapidity, reaching an asymptote below that required for the original discrimination. A second group of rats was trained on a similar instrumental schedule, in which at least one response to the S + was required for food delivery. Response rates in this instrumental (IN) group were approximately double those of the AU group. However, ratios of S + to S° response rates were similar to those of the AU group, and the serial reversal curves generated were qualitatively similar. Thus rats can show improvement across serial reversals of a spatial discrimination based entirely on pairings of stimulus events (automaintenance), in a manner similar to that observed in instrumental procedures, in which reward is contingent upon correct responding.
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