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Grisante, Priscila C.; Galesi, Fernanda L.; Sabino, Nathali M.; Debert, Paula; Arntzen, Erik; McIlvane, William J. – Psychological Record, 2013
When the matching-to-sample (MTS) procedure is used, different training structures imply differences in the successive discriminations required in training and test conditions. When the go/no-go procedure with compound stimuli is used, however, differences in training structures do not imply such differences. This study assessed whether the…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Training Methods, Responses, Reinforcement
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Polenick, Courtney Allyn; Flora, Stephen Ray – Psychological Record, 2012
The effects of social praise contingent on either usual (conventional) or unusual (unconventional) responses during an object uses task were assessed on measures of generalized creativity in two novel, unrelated tasks. Participants were 20 older adults, ages 63 to 89 years (M = 80.90), who were recruited from a joint skilled nursing and assisted…
Descriptors: Creativity, Social Reinforcement, Residential Care, Data Collection
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Belke, Terry W. – Psychological Record, 2011
The current study examined the variables that influence postreinforcement pause (PRP) duration in rats when wheel running serves as the reinforcing consequence. The relationship between revolutions and PRP duration when revolutions were manipulated within a session and the effect of changing the response requirement from fixed to variable on PRP…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Animals, Reaction Time, Responses
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Kroger-Costa, Andreia; Abreu-Rodrigues, Josele – Psychological Record, 2012
The present study investigated the effect of the presence of the experimenter on behavioral sensitivity to contingency change. In history training, college students were exposed to differential reinforcement of low rate (DRL) and fixed-ratio (FR) schedules, and in testing, to a fixed-interval (FI) schedule. For the control group, instructions were…
Descriptors: Contingency Management, Reinforcement, Instruction, History
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Poling, Alan; Edwards, Timothy L.; Weeden, Marc; Foster, T. Mary – Psychological Record, 2011
This article introduces the quantitative analysis of choice behavior by describing a number of equations developed over the years to describe the relation between the allocation of behavior under concurrent schedules of reinforcement and the consequences received for alternative responses. Direct proportionality between rate of responding and rate…
Descriptors: Selection, Behavior, Responses, Reinforcement
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Troisi, Joseph R., II – Psychological Record, 2011
Operant extinction contingencies can undermine the discriminative stimulus effects of drugs. Here, nicotine (0.4 mg/kg) and ethanol (0.8 g/kg) first functioned as either an S[superscript D] or S[superscript Delta], in a counterbalanced one-lever go/no-go (across sessions) operant drug discrimination procedure. Pavlovian extinction in the training…
Descriptors: Narcotics, Classical Conditioning, Animals, Drug Use
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Pulido, Marco A.; Martinez, Guillermo – Psychological Record, 2010
The present study assessed the effects of systematically separating the cue from the response in temporally defined schedules of delayed signaled reinforcement. Identical schedules were used to study the effects of the independent variable on response acquisition and response maintenance. In the first experiment, 8 groups of 3 naive rats were…
Descriptors: Behavior, Reinforcement, Cues, Responses
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Sy, Jolene R.; Borrero, John C.; Borrero, Carrie S. W. – Psychological Record, 2010
We assessed problem and appropriate behavior in the natural environment from a matching perspective. Problem and appropriate behavior were conceptualized as concurrently available responses, the occurrence of which was thought to be determined by the relative rates or durations of reinforcement. We also assessed whether response allocation could…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Objective Tests, Responses, Reinforcement
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Blanco, Fernando; Matute, Helena; Vadillo, Miguel A. – Psychological Record, 2009
Depressive realism consists of the lower personal control over uncontrollable events perceived by depressed as compared to nondepressed individuals. In this article, we propose that the realism of depressed individuals is caused not by an increased accuracy in perception, but by their more comprehensive exposure to the actual environmental…
Descriptors: Realism, Probability, Depression (Psychology), Locus of Control
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McComas, Jennifer J.; Hartman, Ellie C.; Jimenez, Angel – Psychological Record, 2008
The influence of magnitude of reinforcement was examined on both response rate and behavioral persistence. During Phase 1, a multiple schedule of concurrent reinforcement was implemented in which reinforcement for one response option was held constant at VI 30 s across both components, while magnitude of reinforcement for the other response option…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Persistence, Behavior, Computers
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Baumann, Ana A.; Abreu-Rodrigues, Josele; da Silva Souza, Alessandra – Psychological Record, 2009
Four experiments compared the effects of self-rules and rules, and varied and specific schedules of reinforcement. Participants were first exposed to either several schedules (varied groups) or to one schedule (specific groups) and either were asked to generate rules (self-rule groups), were provided rules (rule groups), or were not asked nor…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Differences, Governance, Behavior Patterns
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Forzano, Lori-Ann B.; Chelonis, John J.; Casey, Caitlin; Forward, Marion; Stachowiak, Jacqueline A.; Wood, Jennifer – Psychological Record, 2010
Self-control can be defined as the choice of a larger, more delayed reinforcer over a smaller, less delayed reinforcer, and impulsiveness as the opposite. Previous research suggests that exposure to visual food cues affects adult humans' self-control. Previous research also suggests that food deprivation decreases adult humans' self-control. The…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Disadvantaged Environment, Cues, Females
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Dymond, Simon; Roche, Bryan; Forsyth, John P.; Whelan, Robert; Rhoden, Julia – Psychological Record, 2008
Two experiments were designed to replicate and extend previous findings on the transformation of avoidance response functions in accordance with the relational frames of Same and Opposite. Participants were first exposed to non-arbitrary and arbitrary relational training and testing. Next, during avoidance conditioning, one stimulus from the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Behavior Patterns, Visual Stimuli, Auditory Stimuli
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Lee, Ronald; Sturmey, Peter; Fields, Lanny – Psychological Record, 2007
Response variability, a fundamental characteristic of behavior, may be in some cases an induced effect of reinforcement schedules. Research on schedule-induced response variability has shown that continuous reinforcement results in less variability than intermittent reinforcement schedules. Studies on the effects of intermittency of reinforcement,…
Descriptors: Investigations, Reinforcement, Research, Responses
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Weatherly, Jeffrey N.; Bauste, Grant A.; McDougall, Casey L.; Nurnberger, Jeri T. – Psychological Record, 2006
Previous research has shown that rats increase their rate of responding for 1% sucrose reinforcement in the first half of the session if food-pellet, rather than 1% sucrose, reinforcement will be available in the second half (i.e., positive induction). Four experiments investigated whether this induction effect would be changed by altering the…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Logical Thinking, Animal Behavior, Animals
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