SECOND‐ORDER SCHEDULES: DISCRIMINATION OF COMPONENTS,1
- 1 September 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
- Vol. 24 (2) , 157-171
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jeab.1975.24-157
Abstract
Pigeons were exposed to a series of second-order schedules in which the completion of a fixed number of fixed-interval components produced food. In Experiment 1, brief (2 sec) stimulus presentations occurred as each fixed-interval component was completed. During the brief-stimulus presentation terminating the last fixed-interval component, a response was required on a second key, the brief-stimulus key, to produce food. Responses on the brief-stimulus key before the last brief-stimulus presentation had no scheduled consequences, but served as a measure of the extent to which the final component was discriminated from preceding components. Whether there were one, two, four, or eight fixed-interval components, responses on the brief-stimulus key occurred during virtually every brief-stimulus presentation. In Experiment 2, an attempt was made to punish unnecessary responses on the brief-stimulus key, i.e., responses on the brief-stimulus key that occurred before the last component. None of the pigeons learned to withhold these responses, even though they produced a 15-sec timeout and loss of primary reinforcement. In Experiment 3, different key colors were associated with each component of a second-order schedule (a chain schedule). In contrast to Experiment 1, brief-stimulus key responses were confined to the last component. It was concluded that pigeons do not discriminate well between components of second-order schedules unless a unique exteroceptive cue is provided for each component. The relative discriminability of the components may account for the observed differences in initial-component response rates between comparable brief-stimulus, tandem, and chain schedules.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- ASSOCIATIVE FACTORS UNDERLYING THE PIGEON'S KEY PECKING IN AUTO‐SHAPING PROCEDURES1Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1973
- RESPONDING UNDER CHAINED AND TANDEM FIXED‐RATIO SCHEDULESJournal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1973
- THE MAINTENANCE OF KEY PECKING BY STIMULUS‐CONTINGENT AND RESPONSE‐INDEPENDENT FOOD PRESENTATIONJournal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1973
- Reinforcement Schedules: Contingency or Contiguity?Published by Elsevier ,1972
- Classical Conditioning of a Complex Skeletal ResponseScience, 1971
- Cognition and conditioning: Effects of masking the CS-UCS contingency on human GSR classical conditioning.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1970
- RELATIONS BETWEEN PATTERNS OF RESPONDING AND THE PRESENTATION OF STIMULI UNDER SECOND‐ORDER SCHEDULES1Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 1969
- Comparison of classical conditioning and relational learning.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1968
- Effects of "anxiety-lessening" instructions and differential set development on the extinction of GSR.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1963
- Motivational properties of frustration: I. Effect on a running response of the addition of frustration to the motivational complex.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1952