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J Exp Anal Behav. 1973 September; 20(2): 163–181.
doi: 10.1901/jeab.1973.20-163.
PMCID: PMC1334117
The form of the auto-shaped response with food or water reinforcers1
H. M. Jenkins and Bruce R. Moore
1This research was supported in part by grants from the National Research Council of Canada to the first author and from the Research Development Fund of Dalhousie University to the second author. Experiments 1 to 4 were done by H. M. Jenkins. Experiment 5 was done by B. R. Moore. For convenience of exposition, Experiment 5 is reported last although it was, in fact, completed before Experiments 2 to 4 were begun. The authors are grateful to Darwin Muir for developing the deprivation and reinforcement procedures used in several of these experiments. Reprints may be obtained from H. M. Jenkins, Dept. of Psychology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, or B. R. Moore, Dept. of Psychology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Abstract
The relation between the form of auto-shaped responses to the lighting of a key and the consummatory responses of pecking grain and drinking water was examined in pigeons. Responses on the key were analyzed by means of high-speed photography, recordings of the force of contact, and judges' ratings of response-form based on film and videotape recordings. The first experiment showed that food-deprived birds presented grain as a reinforcer responded on the key with a grain-pecking movement, while water-deprived birds presented water as a reinforcer responded with drinking-like movements. The second and third experiments showed that the resemblance between auto-shaped and consummatory responses does not require the dominance of the deprivational state appropriate to the reinforcer. Changing the dominant state of deprivation did not immediately change the form of the key response, and in subjects simultaneously deprived of food and water, the form of response depended on the reinforcer. In the fourth and fifth experiments, subjects simultaneously deprived of food and water received one stimulus signalling food and another signalling water in a random series. In most subjects, the response to each stimulus resembled the consummatory response to the particular reinforcer that was signalled by the stimulus. This result demonstrates the role of association between a stimulus and a reinforcer in producing a resemblance of the auto-shaped response to the consummatory response.
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Selected References
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