Abstract
Rats pressed levers for Noyes pellets or keys for sweetened condensed milk reinforcers delivered by multiple schedules. Session length and baseline rates of reinforcement were varied in two experiments. Rates of responding increased during the early part of the session and then decreased for both responses and reinforcers, as well as for all subjects and values of the independent variables. Changes in response rates across the session sometimes exceeded 500%. Respoiise rates peaked approximately 20 min after the beginning of the session, regardless of session duration, when subjects responded on a multiple variable interval 1-min variable interval 1-min schedule. The function was flatter for longer sessions than it was for shorter sessions. The function was flatter, more symmetrical, and peaked later for lower rates of reinforcement than for higher rates of reinforcement. The function appeared early in training, and further experience moved and reduced its peak. Variables related to reinforcement exerted more control over some aspects of this function than did variables related to responding. These within-session patterns of responding may have fundamental implications for experimental design and theorizing.
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This research was partially supported by NIMH Grant MH 42466. The author wishes to thank John Hinson for his comments on an early version of this manuscript and Cam Melville for his help in conducting the experiments.
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McSweeney, F.K. Rate of reinforcement and session duration as determinants of within-session patterns of responding. Animal Learning & Behavior 20, 160–169 (1992). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03200413
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03200413