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Varying initial-link and terminal-link durations in concurrent-chains schedules: a comparison of three models.

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Author/contributor
Title
Varying initial-link and terminal-link durations in concurrent-chains schedules: a comparison of three models.
Abstract
In Experiment 1, pigeons responded on concurrent-chains schedules with equal variable-interval schedules as initial links and fixed delays to food as terminal links. One terminal-link delay was always three times as long as the other. As terminal-link delays increased, response percentages on the key with the shorter terminal link increased according to a curvilinear function. This result supported the predictions of the hyperbolic value-added model and the contextual-choice theory but not delay-reduction theory. In Experiment 2, the terminal links were always delays of 2 s and 12 s, followed by food, and the durations of the initial links varied across conditions. As initial-link durations increased, pigeons' response percentages on the key with the shorter terminal link decreased, but toward an asymptote greater than 50%, indicating a continued preference for the shorter terminal link with very long initial links. This result was more consistent with the predictions of the hyperbolic-value added model than with those of the contextual-choice model or of delay-reduction theory. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Publication
Behavioural Processes
Date
JUN 30 2004
Volume
66
Issue
3
Pages
189-200
Journal Abbr
Behav. Processes
Citation Key
pop00145
ISSN
0376-6357
Language
English
Extra
2 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Citation Key Alias: lens.org/023-773-022-282-811 tex.type: [object Object]
Citation
Mazur, J. E. (2004). Varying initial-link and terminal-link durations in concurrent-chains schedules: a comparison of three models. Behavioural Processes, 66(3), 189–200. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.beproc.2004.03.004