Abstract
Responding was maintained in two squirrel monkeys under several variations of a 10‐min fixed‐interval schedule of electric shock presentation. The monkeys were first trained under a 2‐min variable‐interval schedule of food presentation, and then under a concurrent schedule of food presentation and shock presentation. In one monkey, when shocks (12.6 ma) followed each response during the last minute of an 11‐min cycle ending with a timeout period, responding was increased during the first 10 min and suppressed during the last minute of each cycle. When the shock schedule was eliminated, both the enhancement and suppression disappeared, and a steady rate of responding was maintained under the variable‐interval schedule. When the food schedule was eliminated, the shock schedule maintained a characteristic fixed‐interval pattern of responding during the first 10 min, but suppressed responding during the last minute of each cycle. The fixed‐interval pattern of responding was maintained when the timeout period was eliminated and when only one shock could occur at the end of the cycle. In the second monkey, responding under the concurrent food and shock schedule was suppressed when responses produced shocks after 3‐min. Under an 11‐min cycle, responding continued to be maintained at increasing shock intensities. When the food schedule was eliminated, a fixed‐interval pattern of responding was maintained under a 10‐min schedule of shock presentation (12.6 ma). Whether response‐produced electric shocks suppressed responding or maintained responding depended on the schedule of shock presentation.