Two pigeons that were previously exposed to a multiple schedule of reinforcement in the presence of a stuffed and a live pigeon, and two of three naive pigeons, responded on a mirror during exposure to multiple fixed-ratio, fixed-ratio schedules of reinforcement for key pecking. Both the topography and temporal pattern of mirror responding were comparable to schedule-induced "attack" on live and stuffed targets. Rate of target responding was reduced when either the mirror was covered with paper or when the multiple schedule was removed. A reversal in the relationship between reinforcement schedules and discriminative stimuli demonstrated that mirror responding was controlled by the stimulus correlated with the higher fixed-ratio schedule. With one component of the multiple schedule held constant at fixed ratio 25 and the ratio requirement of the other component varying from 25 to 150, there was an inverted U-shaped relationship between rate of mirror responding and fixed-ratio schedule in the varied component. As in Flory's study (1969b) there was an inverted U-shaped relationship between target responding and inter-food intervals. The combined results of these studies suggest that the relationship between rate of target responding and reinforcement schedules is controlled primarily by the inter-food intervals resulting from the schedules.
A discrete-trial punishment procedure, with rats, was used to examine how delay-of-shock intervals of 0 to 28 sec and shock intensity interact to decrease the frequency and increase the latency of a positively reinforced response. For delay-of-shock intervals of 0, 7, 14, and 28 sec, there was a range of shock intensities, for some subjects, over which the punishing effect of shock was an increasing, monotonic function of shock intensity. For other subjects this transition was abrupt. Functions relating response frequency and latency measures to shock intensity were displaced toward higher values on the shock intensity axis with an increase in delayof-shock interval. The effects of "gradual" and "abrupt" introduction to "severe" shock, as well as re-exposure to previously used shock intensities, were examined under both the immediate and delay-of-shock conditions. With delay-of-shock intervals of 7, 14, or 28 sec, shock intensities of approximately 0.50 milliamperes or greater were necessary to decrease substantially the number and increase the latency of the lever-pressing response. For the immediate punishment group this intensity was approximately 0.20 ma. These facts were related to Annau and Kamin's (1961) conditioned emotional response experiment in which a shock intensity of 0.49 ma or greater was required to suppress the rate of a positively reinforced response.The intensity of a punishing stimulus, as well as the temporal interval between a response and punishing stimulus, affect the future probability of occurrence of the punished response. Experiments by Appel (1963) with rats, Azrin (1960) with pigeons, and Hake, Azrin, and Oxford (1967) with monkeys have all shown that over a limited range of shock intensities, the rate of a positively reinforced response is inversely related to the intensity of response-contingent shock.The results of several punishment studies in which the temporal interval between a response and punishing stimulus was varied, suggest that the rate of a punished response is directly porportional to the delay-of-shock interval. For tinction of the avoidance response, each response was punished with shock. Kamin observed that the total number of responses made during punishment trials was directly proportional to delay-of-shock intervals of 0 to approximately 30 sec. Karsh (1965), also using rats, reported that the rate of a punished, positively reinforced response was directly proportional to delay-of-shock intervals of 0 to 20 sec.There has been little study of the manner in which delay-of-shock interval and shock intensity interact to reduce the frequency of occurrence of a punished response. Karsh (1965), in the above mentioned study, exposed four groups of rats to delay-of-shock intervals of either 2, 5, 10, or 20 sec and gradually increased the shock intensity from 65 to 105 v. Under these conditions, successive increments in shock intensity resulted in a decrease in response rate which lasted only for several sessions. On the other hand, Camp, Raymond, and Church (1967), us...
White King pigeons exposed to food schedules before introduction of a colored photograph of a pigeon showed sustained schedule-induced attack on that image; additional birds given an early introduction to both the photograph and the schedule subsequently attacked the image at lower rates. Other pigeons attacked a second photograph of a pigeon regardless of whether it was introduced early or late. The late-introduction procedure was also effective in establishing attack on a projected image of a conspecific. The combined results showed that 14 of 17 White King pigeons given a late introduction to a pictorial target exhibited sustained attack against it and that a pigeon's initial reaction to a photograph of a conspecific when introduced early was a good predictor of subsequent schedule-induced attack on it.
Three pigeons with a history of attacking a mirror target, and two of six pigeons with no prior exposure to targets, attacked a colored photograph of a conspecific during exposure to intermittent schedules of reinforcement for key pecking. Rate of attack on the photograph decreased when the reinforcement schedule was removed. The topography, temporal pattern, and locus of attack on the picture were comparable to schedule-induced attack on live, stuffed, and mirror targets. When silhouette, outline, and plain paper targets were used, schedule-induced attack was more sensitive to a change in target characteristics with a concurrent target-preference procedure than with an analogous successive-testing procedure. The combined results of the two testing procedures indicated that an "upright" white-on-black silhouette of a pigeon with or without an eye was more effective in controlling attack than was a comparable "inverted" silhouette, an outline of a pigeon, or a piece of colored paper.
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