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Effects of reward magnitude on running speed following a deprivation upshift

  • Published: 07 November 2013
  • Volume 15, pages 150–152, (1980)
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Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society Aims and scope
Effects of reward magnitude on running speed following a deprivation upshift
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  • T. L. Davidson1,
  • Elizabeth D. Capaldi1 &
  • David E. Myers1 
  • 265 Accesses

  • 1 Citation

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Abstract

The running speed of rats trained in a straight alley under low deprivation (99%–101% ad-lib body weight) and then shifted to high deprivation (79%–81% ad-lib body weight) was compared with that of unshifted high-deprivation controls. Running speeds of shifted rats increased more rapidly, relative to unshifted controls, when reward magnitude was large (22.045-g pellets) as compared with small (2.045-g pellets). Thus the effect of a deprivation shift on instrumental performance was found to vary as a function of reward magnitude. Deprivation downshifts also produce more rapid and larger performance changes when large reward is used than when small reward is used. It seems that responsivity to changes in level of deprivation is an increasing function of reward magnitude.

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Author information

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Psychological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, 47907

    T. L. Davidson, Elizabeth D. Capaldi & David E. Myers

Authors
  1. T. L. Davidson
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  2. Elizabeth D. Capaldi
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  3. David E. Myers
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Additional information

This research was supported in part by a Purdue Research Foundation David Ross Grant.

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Cite this article

Davidson, T.L., Capaldi, E.D. & Myers, D.E. Effects of reward magnitude on running speed following a deprivation upshift. Bull. Psychon. Soc. 15, 150–152 (1980). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03334493

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  • Received: 11 December 1979

  • Published: 07 November 2013

  • Issue Date: March 1980

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03334493

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Keywords

  • Large Reward
  • Reward Magnitude
  • Small Reward
  • Deprivation Level
  • Instrumental Performance
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