Literature DB >> 16812556

Typical delay determines waiting time on periodic-food schedules: Static and dynamic tests.

C D Wynne, J E Staddon.   

Abstract

Pigeons and other animals soon learn to wait (pause) after food delivery on periodic-food schedules before resuming the food-rewarded response. Under most conditions the steady-state duration of the average waiting time, t, is a linear function of the typical interfood interval. We describe three experiments designed to explore the limits of this process. In all experiments, t was associated with one key color and the subsequent food delay, T, with another. In the first experiment, we compared the relation between t (waiting time) and T (food delay) under two conditions: when T was held constant, and when T was an inverse function of t. The pigeons could maximize the rate of food delivery under the first condition by setting t to a consistently short value; optimal behavior under the second condition required a linear relation with unit slope between t and T. Despite this difference in optimal policy, the pigeons in both cases showed the same linear relation, with slope less than one, between t and T. This result was confirmed in a second parametric experiment that added a third condition, in which T + t was held constant. Linear waiting appears to be an obligatory rule for pigeons. In a third experiment we arranged for a multiplicative relation between t and T (positive feedback), and produced either very short or very long waiting times as predicted by a quasi-dynamic model in which waiting time is strongly determined by the just-preceding food delay.

Entities:  

Year:  1988        PMID: 16812556      PMCID: PMC1338868          DOI: 10.1901/jeab.1988.50-197

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Anal Behav        ISSN: 0022-5002            Impact factor:   2.468


  11 in total

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Authors:  J E STADDON
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2.  A two-state analysis of fixed-interval responding in the pigeon.

Authors:  B A Schneider
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3.  Temporal tracking on cyclic-interval reinforcement schedules.

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7.  The response-reinforcement dependency in fixed-interval schedules of reinforcement.

Authors:  R L Shull
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8.  Determinants of pigeons' waiting time: Effects of interreinforcement interval and food delay.

Authors:  K Manabe
Journal:  J Exp Anal Behav       Date:  1990-01       Impact factor: 2.468

9.  Pigeons' wait-time responses to transitions in interfood-interval duration: Another look at cyclic schedule performance.

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