Aversive schedules with independent probabilities of reinforcement for responding and not responding by rhesus monkeys: II. Without signal.

Abstract
Applied 2 independent probabilities of electric shock presentation to 12 naive male rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) as the independent variables defining schedules of aversive control: (a) the probability that a fixed signal period would end with a shock if a specified response were made and (b) the probability that the fixed signal period would end with shock if a specified response were not made. Systematic changes in the probability values generated several familiar schedules of aversive control, as well as several intermittent procedures. Response rate tended to rise during the signal period when the probability values were set so that not responding was more likely to produce a shock than responding; response rate tended to fall during the signal period when the probabilities were set so that responding was more likely to produce shock than not responding. Response patterning in time was also evident during the interval between signals when no consequences were programmed. These characteristics of response patterning reflected the changes in the 2 independent probability variables in ways that simple measures of response rate and shock rate alone did not. (15 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved)