PROJECTOR SLIDE CHANGING AND FOCUSING AS OPERANT REINFORCERS
- 1 September 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
- Vol. 10 (5) , 479-484
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jeab.1967.10-479
Abstract
Uninstructed subjects choose to view, in sharp focus where possible, projected visual images in preference to various simpler auditory and visual stimuli (e.g., buzzers of flashing lights). The rate of responding on the lever rapidly increased above the operant level (projector inoperative) even though the stimuli were nonsense syllables. When focusing also was made contingent on responses, the subjects promptly started sharpening the focus of legible but blurred nonsense syllables. When the visual material was colored landscape scenes, the rates of slide-changing generally decreased, because of increased viewing time relative to the nonsense syllables, at the same time that the latencies of focusing decreased. Both the sharpness of focus and the total time spent with the image in sharp focus increased greatly with the colored slides, establishing that the subjects were under control of the stimulus events. Extinction of both responses occurred very rapidly when the controls became inoperative.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Responsiveness of Rhesus Monkeys to Motion PicturesThe Journal of Genetic Psychology, 1961
- Variably Blurred Prompting: I. Methodology and Application to the Analysis of Paired-Associate LearningThe Journal of Psychology, 1960