RELATIONS BETWEEN PATTERNS OF RESPONDING AND THE PRESENTATION OF STIMULI UNDER SECOND‐ORDER SCHEDULES1

Abstract
Key-pecking behavior in the pigeon was maintained under second-order schedules in which food was presented after a variable number of 2-min fixed-interval components were completed. When either the same stimulus (Exp. I) or different stimuli (Exp. II) appeared on the key during consecutive components, and a stimulus that was occasionally paired with food was presented briefly at completion of each component, (1) patterns of positively accelerated responding were maintained during the components, and, (2) mean response rates were generally as high during the initial components of a sequence as during the later components. In both experiments, when the food-paired stimulus was omitted and either no stimulus or a stimulus never paired with food was presented at completion of each component, mean rates of responding increased, but patterns of positively accelerated responding were not maintained during individual components. When a food-paired stimulus was not presented at completion of the components, mean response rates in Exp. I were low during the initial components of a sequence and gradually increased during subsequent components; in Exp. II mean response rates were variable, and pauses and abrupt changes in response rates were typical.

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