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Evidence against a constant-difference effect in concurrent-chains schedules

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Evidence against a constant-difference effect in concurrent-chains schedules
Abstract
Savastano and Fantino (1996) reported that in concurrent-chains schedules, initial-link choice proportions remained constant as terminal-link durations increased as long as the subtractive difference between the two terminal-link schedules remained constant. Two experiments with pigeons were conducted to examine this constant-difference effect. Both experiments used equal variable-interval schedules as initial links. The terminal links were fixed delays to reinforcement in Experiment 1 and variable delays to reinforcement in Experiment 2. The durations of the terminal links were varied across conditions, but the difference between pairs of terminal links was always 10 s. In both experiments, preference for the shorter terminal link became less extreme as terminal-link, durations increased, so a constant-difference effect was not found, It is argued, however, that this choice situation does not provide clear evidence for or against delay-reduction theory versus other theories of choice.
Publication
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
Date
2002-03
Volume
77
Issue
2
Pages
147-155
Journal Abbr
J Exp Anal Behav
Citation Key
mazurEvidenceConstantdifferenceEffect2002
ISSN
0022-5002
Language
English
Extra
3 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Place: United States Mazur, James E. Psychology Department, Southern Connecticut State University, New Heaven 06515, USA. mazur@southernct.edu
Citation
Mazur, J. E. (2002). Evidence against a constant-difference effect in concurrent-chains schedules. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 77(2), 147–155. https://doi.org/10.1901/jeab.2002.77-147