Two- versus three-alternative concurrent-chain schedules: a test of three models.

J Exp Psychol Anim Behav Process

Psychology Department, Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven 06515-1355, USA.

Published: July 2000

Two experiments with pigeons used concurrent-chain procedures with variable-interval schedules as initial links and different delays to food as terminal links. Two schedules were present in all sessions, but a 3rd schedule was alternately present and absent in successive sessions. When the 3rd schedule delivered food with no terminal-link delay, the presence of this schedule led to an increase in preference for the schedule with the shorter terminal link of the 2 unchanged schedules. When the terminal-link delay for the 3rd schedule was 30 s, the presence of this schedule led to a decrease in preference for the schedule with the shorter terminal link of the 2 unchanged schedules. These results are inconsistent with the predictions of R. Grace's (1994) contextual-choice model, but they are consistent with 2 other mathematical models--delay-reduction theory and the hyperbolic value-added model.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037//0097-7403.26.3.286DOI Listing

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