review - Physiology
JOURNAL OF THE EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF BEHAVIOR
EFFECTS OF DELAYED CONDITIONED REINFORCEMENT
IN CHAIN SCHEDULES
PAUL ROYALTY, BEN A. WILLIAMS, AND EDMUND FANTINO
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA-SAN DIEGO
The contingency between responding and stimulus change on a chain variable-interval 33-s, variable-
interval 33-s, variable-interval 33-s schedule was weakened by interposing 3-s delays between either
the first and second or the second and third links. No stimulus change signaled the delay interval and
responses could occur during it, so the obtained delays were often shorter than the scheduled delay.
When the delay occurred after the initial link, initial-link response rates decreased by an average of
77\% with no systematic change in response rates in the second or third links. Response rates in the
second link decreased an average of 59\% when the delay followed that link, again with little effect
on response rates in the first or third links. Because the effect of delaying stimulus change was
comparable to the effect of delaying primary reinforcement in a simple variable-interval schedule,
and the effect of the unsignaled delay was specific to the link in which the delay occurred, the results
provide strong evidence for the concept of conditioned reinforcement.
Key words: unsignaled delay of reinforcement, chain schedules, conditioned reinforcement, key peck,
pigeons
A chain schedule consists of a series of
schedule requirements, each correlated with a
unique stimulus, only the last of which ter-
minates in primary reinforcement. Transition
between the successive links of the chain is
contingent upon the fulfillment of each sepa-
rate schedule requirement. Chain schedules
thus involve stimulus change, a contingency
between responding and component transi-
tion, and a contingency between responding
and stimulus change. Such schedules have been
commonly used to study conditioned rein-
forcement, based on the premise that behavior
in the early links of the chain is maintained
by the reinforcing properties of the stimulus
that accompanies the next link of the schedule.
A given stimulus in the chain has been as-
sumed to serve both as a discriminative stim-
ulus for its own correlated schedule and as a
conditioned reinforcer for the behavior main-
tained during the stimulus that preceded it.
In order to validate the premise of condi-
tioned reinforcement in chain schedules, the
effects of the contingency between responding
and stimulus change must be dissociated from
This research was supported by NIMH Grant MH-
20752, NSF Grant BNS 83-02963, and NSF Grant BNS
84-08878 to the University of California at San Diego.
Reprints may be obtained from any of the authors, De-
partment of Psychology, C-009, University of California
at San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093.
the effects of the contingency between re-
sponding and component transition (i.e., be-
tween responding in the early links of the chain
and eventual primary reinforcement) and from
the effects of stimulus change alone (in the
absence of contingency). The most frequent
approach for effecting such a dissociation has
been to eliminate the role of stimulus change
by converting the chain schedule to a tandem
schedule. In his review of experiments com-
paring performance under tandem and chained
schedules, Gollub (1977) claimed that, For
two-component chains of FI schedules, the rate
in the first component under chain was gen-
erally higher than tandem (Gollub, 1958), but
not always (Malagodi, DeWeese, & John-
ston, 1973) (pp. 294-295). (The latter study
found no difference between chain and tan-
dem rates.) Subsequently, Wallace, Osborne,
and Fantino (1982) reported a higher rate in
the initial link of the tandem than in the ini-
tial link of the chain schedule. Those authors
review of Gollubs earlier study also suggested
that their own findings were the more typical
result in two-link chain-tandem comparisons.
Other published studies involving chain-tan-
dem comparisons have consistently found
lower response rates in the initial link of a
chain schedule than in the initial link of the
corresponding tandem schedule. This result
has been obtained regardless of whether the
comparison involved three fixed-interval (FI)
41
1987, 479 41-56 NUMBER 1 (JANUARY)
PAUL ROYALTY, BEN A. WILLIAMS, and EDMUND FANTINO
components (Kelleher & Fry, 1962; Thomas,
1964), five Fl components (Gollub, 1958),
three fixed-ratio (FR) components (Jwaideh,
1973; Thomas, 1967), or five FR components
(Jwaideh, 1973). In summary, the compari-
son of chain and tandem schedules offers little
or no support for the concept of conditioned
reinforcement.
A second approach to examining condi-
tioned reinforcement in chain schedules has
been to investigate the effects of response-in-
dependent stimulus change. That is, a chain
schedule is converted into a comparable mul-
tiple schedule. For example, a chain Fl 30-s
FI 30-s Fl 30-s schedule would be converted
into a multiple extinction (EXT) 30-s EXT
30-s FI 30-s schedule. The major difficulty
with such a procedure as a control for a chain
schedule is that removal of the contingency
between responding and stimulus change also
breaks the contingency between responding
and component transition. Specifically, the de-
pendency between responding in the early
links of the chain and the time of the primary
reinforcer is altered in ways that could influ-
ence response rate. A multiple-schedule con-
trol cannot, therefore, rule out the possibility
that responding in the early links of a chain
schedule is maintained by the dependency be-
tween responding in early links and eventual
primary reinforcement alone, rather than by
conditioned reinforcement.
In an attempt to circumvent this liability of
the multiple-schedule control procedure, Ca-
tania, Yohalem, and Silverman (1980) com-
pared not only chain and multiple schedules
but tandem and mixed schedules as well.
Higher rates of responding were maintained
by the contingency between responding and
stimulus change (chain schedule) than by
stimulus change without contingency (multi-
ple schedule). In the absence of any stimulus
change, the contingency between responding
and primary reinforcement (tandem schedule)
did not produce a higher response rate than
the absence of that contingency (mixed sched-
ule). Catania et al. argued that the latter re-
sult demonstrated that the contingency be-
tween responding and primary reinforcement
was unimportant in the maintenance of be-
havior in the early links of the chain schedule
and that the difference found between the
chain and multiple schedules was therefore
direct support for the role of conditioned re-
inforcement.
The problem with using the tandem-mixed
schedule comparison to control for contin-
gency in the chain-multiple schedule compar-
ison is that the response rates in the first two
links of the tandem and mixed schedules were
much higher than the corresponding rates in
the first two links of the chain and multiple
schedules (see Figure 1 of Catania et al.,
1980). These high rates prevented the subject
from encountering the difference in the con-
tingencies between responding and component
transition on the tandem and on the mixed
schedules. The consequence of responding at
a moderately high rate was the same on both
the tandem and the mixed schedule-namely,
the schedule advanced. Only the consequence
of not responding differed on these two sched-
ules; the only way to have contacted this con-
tingency would have been to not respond for
a period of time, but the high response rates
prevented that contact. By contrast, the near-
zero response rates in the initial links of both
the chain and multiple schedules ensured con-
tact with the differential consequences of not
responding on those two schedules. Thus, the
tandem-mixed schedule comparison did not
rule out contingency between responding and
primary reinforcement as a plausible expla-
nation of the response-rate differences be-
tween the chain and multiple schedules.
In summary, the experimental analysis of
stimulus functions in chained schedules of re-
inforcement has failed to make a totally con-
vincing case for the concept of conditioned re-
inforcement because the control procedures
most frequently used, tandem and multiple
schedules, have either often produced re-
sponse-rate differences in the wrong direction
(tandem schedules) or have failed to preclude
possible alternative interpretations (multiple
schedules). Perhaps because of these difficul-
ties, the concept of conditioned reinforcement
has fallen into ill repute. For example, in a
recent textbook Staddon (1983) has written:
The concept of conditioned reinforcement (that
is, the response contingency between pecking
and stimulus change) adds nothing to our un-
derstanding of chain schedules.... Providing
the response contingency for food in the ter-
minal links is maintained, it can be omitted in
earlier links with little effect on key pecking,
as long as stimulus changes continue to take
place as before.... Behavior on chained sched-
ules is determined by temporal proximity to
food in the same way as behavior on multiple
schedules. (p. 466)
42
CONDITIONED REINFORCEMENT IN CHAIN SCHEDULES
What is needed is a new method for dem-
onstrating the action of conditioned reinforce-
ment in chain schedules that avoids the pit-
falls of tandem and multiple schedule
comparisons. One such alternative approach
to studying the role of conditioned reinforce-
ment in chain schedules involves a comparison
between delayed versus immediate transition
between components. As suggested by Dins-
moor and Clayton (1966), the reinforcing
properties of a stimulus can be indexed by
whether its effects are diminished by increas-
ing the delay between responding and stimu-
lus presentation. Thus, to the extent that
stimulus transitions during a chain schedule
constitute conditioned reinforcers, the behav-
ior during the early links of the chain should
be decreased if the presentation of the stimu-
lus for the succeeding link of the chain is de-
layed rather than immediately contingent on
the response. The efficacy for using delay of
reinforcement as a tool for investigating con-
ditioned reinforcement is suggested by results
from the unsignaled delay-of-reinforcement
procedure (Catania & Keller, 1981; Sizemore
& Lattall, 1977, 1978; Williams, 1976b). With
this procedure, typically studied on interval
schedules, the first response after a primary
reinforcer is set up begins a delay timer and
the reinforcer is delivered at the end of delay-
timer operation. No stimulus change signals
the delay interval and responses can occur
during it, so the obtained delays are often
shorter than those scheduled. Nevertheless, this
procedure typically produces large decrements
(on the order of 70\% to 90\%) in response rates
with even very short (2- to 3-s) delays.
The current study investigated unsignaled
delays of conditioned reinforcement by inter-
posing 3-s unsignaled delays between the first
and second and the second and third links of
a chain of variable-interval schedules (chain
VI 33-s VI 33-s VI 33-s). This procedure
minimized possible confounding factors be-
cause the discriminative functions of the com-
ponent stimuli and the contingencies between
responding, schedule advancement, and even-
tual primary-reinforcer delivery were present
during both baseline and delay conditions. In-
terreinforcement intervals were held constant
across baseline and delay conditions by short-
ening each interval in the VI schedule by 3 s
whenever the delay contingency was in effect.
Thus, the delay contingency postponed pre-
sentation of the stimulus correlated with the
next link of the chain by 3 s or less but did
not alter the relation between responding in
early links of the chain and food delivery in a
way that could be influential. If presentation
of each stimulus correlated with the chain does
indeed serve to reinforce responding in the link
that precedes it, then one would expect that
the unsignaled delay of one of these stimuli
would have the same effect as the unsignaled
delay of primary reinforcement-namely, a
substantial response-rate decrement in the
preceding link.
METHOD
Subjects
Six adult male White Carneaux pigeons,
all with extensive experimental histories,
served as subjects. Throughout the experi-
ment, all subjects were housed individually and
had free access to water and grit. The birds
were weighed after each experimental session
and were fed measured amounts of Universal
Feeds Pigeon Pellets to maintain them at 80\%
of their free-feeding body weights.
Apparatus
Six identical, rectangular, operant-condi-
tioning chambers were used. The chambers
consisted of opaque black plastic side walls,
sheet aluminum front and back walls, a ply-
wood ceiling, and a wire mesh floor. Each
chamber was 32 cm high, 35 cm wide, and 36
cm deep and had three response keys, each
2.5 cm in diameter, mounted 23 cm from the
floor and 7.25 cm apart, center to center, on
the front wall. Each key could be transillu-
minated from the rear and required a mini-
mum force of approximately 0.15 N to oper-
ate. Feedback for each effective peck on a
lighted key was provided by darkening the key
for 100 ms. Only the right key was used; the
left and center keys remained dark and re-
sponses on them were not recorded. Access to
a solenoid-operated grain hopper, when acti-
vated, was available through a rectangular
opening, 5 cm high and 6 cm wide, located
9.5 cm below the center key. Reinforcers con-
sisted of 3.5-s access to milo. While the hop-
per was raised, it was illuminated by a white
light and the keylights were extinguished.
General chamber illumination was provided
by a dim blue houselight mounted 4 cm above
the right key. A ventilation fan and continu-
ously present white noise masked extraneous
43
PAUL ROYALTY, BEN A. WILLIAMS, and EDMUND FANTINO
Table 1
Order of conditions, schedules (in seconds), and number of sessions per condition.
Condition Schedule Sessions
1. Baseline Chain VI 33 VI 33 VI 33 25
2. Initial-link delay Chain (VI 30 delay) VI 33 VI 33 20
3. Baseline Chain VI 33 VI 33 VI 33 20
4. Middle-link delay Chain VI 33 (VI 30 delay) VI 33 25
5. Baseline Chain VI 33 VI 33 VI 33 30
6. Terminal-link delay Chain VI 33 VI 33 (VI 30 delay) 30
sounds. Scheduling of experimental events and
data recording were performed by a PDP-8E®
(Digital Equipment Corporation) computer
located in an adjacent room.
Procedure
Although all subjects had extensive exper-
imental histories, they had not been active for
approximately 6 months prior to the begin-
ning of the current experiment. To reestablish
key pecking, all subjects were placed on a VI
30-s schedule for five sessions. The key was
white during this pretraining period and ses-
sions terminated after 60 reinforcers had been
delivered. After pretraining, subjects were ex-
posed successively to the conditions shown in
Table 1. Key colors that accompanied the ini-
tial, middle, and terminal links were blue, red,
and white, respectively, throughout the ex-
periment.
During baseline conditions, the VI sched-
ules consisted of intervals pseudorandomly se-
lected from a modified, 20-interval, Fleshler
and Hoffman (1962) distribution. This dis-
tribution consisted of a standard, 20-interval,
VI 30-s Fleshler and Hoffman distribution
with 3 s added to each of the 20 intervals.
When an unsignaled delay followed a given
link, the standard, unmodified VI 30-s distri-
bution was substituted for the modified dis-
tribution in that link. In this manner, the
scheduled interreinforcement interval (IRI)
remained constant between baseline and delay
conditions. Each delay condition was preceded
and followed by the immediate-transition
baseline condition as indicated in Table 1.
During baseline conditions, after a given
interval had elapsed, the next peck was fol-
lowed immediately by the stimulus correlated
with the next link in the chain. During a de-
lay condition, the first peck after the comple-
tion of an interval started a 3-s delay timer.
At the end of the timer operation, stimulus
change and component transition occurred in-
dependently of behavior. Thus, during a delay
condition, the schedule in the designated com-
ponent was changed from a simple VI 33-s
schedule to a tandem VI 30-s FT 3-s sched-
ule. No stimulus change signaled the delay
interval and responses were free to occur dur-
ing it, so the obtained delays between the last
key peck and stimulus change were often
shorter than the 3-s scheduled delay. A mea-
sure of the actual delays was obtained by hav-
ing the key peck that started the delay timer
also start a second timer. Each subsequent peck
during the delay interval reset this second
timer. Upon component transition, the elapsed
time on the second timer was recorded on a
cumulative timer from which the average de-
lay-per-stimulus change was computed.
Sessions were conducted 5 to 7 days per
week and were terminated after 60 reinforcers
had been delivered. Each condition was con-
ducted for a minimum of 20 sessions after
which response rate as a function of sessions
was plotted for each subject and visually ex-
amined for stability. If the data from any sub-
ject were judged unstable, all subjects received
an additional five training sessions after which
the data were reexamined and either the con-
dition was terminated or an additional five
sessions were conducted for a maximum of 30
sessions.
RESULTS
Figure 1 shows the mean response rate in
each component of the chain during the last
five sessions of the initial-link delay condition
(hatched bars) and the corresponding rate in
each component during baseline (solid bars).
Baseline rates shown were obtained by aver-
aging together the mean response rates during
the last five sessions of the baseline conditions
immediately preceding and following the ini-
44
CONDITIONED REINFORCEMENT IN CHAIN SCHEDULES
140 T
120 -
100
80
60
40
20
DELAYI
NTIAL
140 T
w
1-
n
z
2
w
a.
(I)
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z
0
a.
C,,
Id
120 t
100t
o0
60
40
20
0
70
60
so
40
30
20
10
0
Si
TERNAL
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
200
180
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
S2
INITIAL M1OOLE TER1NAL
250
S3
nTIAL
200
150
100
50
0
TERMN.
S4
INITIAL M OOLE
S5
INITIAL TERIflAL
S6
INITIAL IDDLE TERMIAL
COMPONENT
Fig. 1. Response rates (responses/minute) for each of 6 pigeons in each component of the chain during baseline
(solid bars) and during the condition where the delay to stimulus change was imposed on initial-link responding
(hatched bars). Ordinate scaling varies among subjects.
tial-link delay condition. The data for the in-
dividual conditions are shown in the Appen-
dix. As may be seen in Figure 1, initial-link
response rates decreased during the delay con-
dition for all 6 subjects with an average de-
crease of 77\% from baseline levels. There was
no systematic effect of the initial-link delay
contingency on response rates in either the
middle or terminal links.
Session-by-session initial-link response rates
PAUL ROYALTY, BEN A. WILLIAMS, and EDMUND FANTINO
DELAY BASELINE BASELINE
30 l
25
20
15
10
S-i
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 00 55 60
30
10
so
50
10
10 S-2
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
I0
10
.0. S-3
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
SESSIONS
130
110
70
50
30
10
00
60
70
50
30
20
10
DELAY BASELINE
(M
S-4
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
I S-5
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
0 5 10 1 5 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
SESSIONS
Fig. 2. Initial-link response rates as a function of sessions during the initial-link delay condition and adjacent
baseline conditions.
for each of the 6 subjects are shown in Figure
2. For all subjects the delay contingency took
effect quickly, with large response-rate de-
creases evident after only one to five sessions
of exposure. Response rate then continued to
decrease for the next 15 to 20 sessions and
became generally stable during the last 10 ses-
sions for 4 of the 6 subjects. For 2 subjects (S-
4, S-6), however, response rates were still de-
creasing at the end of exposure to the delay
condition. Recovery from the delay contin-
gency was quite rapid during the return-to-
baseline condition, as the level of responding
from the preceding baseline was typically
reached within five sessions following removal
of the delay contingency.
Figure 3 shows the mean response rate in
each component of the chain during the last
five sessions of the middle-link delay condition
(hatched bars) and the corresponding rate in
each component during baseline (solid bars).
Again, baseline rates were averaged over the
baseline conditions immediately before and
after the middle-link delay condition. Middle-
link response rates decreased during the delay
condition for all subjects, with an average dec-
rement of 59\%. Terminal-link response rates
decreased slightly for all subjects during the
delay condition, and a slight initial-link re-
sponse rate decline was also evident for 4 of
the 6 birds.
Figure 4 shows the middle-link response
46
BASELINE
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5,-
aI
w
C/o 4
z
0
w 2
3
CONDITIONED REINFORCEMENT IN CHAIN SCHEDULES
70
60
50*
47
S4
o40
30
TERMKAL
20
10
0
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0I
200
180
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0
TEWWLA
NTIAL DOOLE TE RIML
S5
NTIAL MIDDLE
S6
INITIAL TEA1IAL
C OMPONENT
Fig. 3. Response rate (response/minute) in each component of the chain during baseline (solid bars) and during
the middle-link delay condition (hatched bars). Ordinate scaling varies from subject to subject.
rates during sessions of the middle-link delay
condition and its adjacent baseline conditions.
As in the initial-link delay condition, response
rates dropped quickly for all 6 subjects, al-
though the rate of decline was notably smaller
for some subjects than was the rate of decline
evident in Figure 2 for the initial-link delay
condition. Because of the slower rate of de-
cline, response rates after 25 sessions were still
decreasing for 4 of the 6 subjects, suggesting
that still lower response rates would have been
obtained had the delay condition been contin-
|* BGELINE|
10 DELAY| Si
160
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0 4
IMTIAL
140 T
120*
100 t
S2
w
tr
z
2
w
a-
U1)
L
Un
z
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w
80I
60 t
40t
20
0
NITIAL MIDDL
S3
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
NTIAL MIDDLE
PAUL ROYALTY, BEN A. WILLIAMS, and EDMUND FANTINO
BASELINE
frAv,Mk
BASELINE DELAY
100
so070
60
50
40
30
20
10
40
20
100 Y-
60 S-2
40
45 SS 65 70 85 95 105 115
70 /
so
50
30
20
.0 .-3
250
200
150
100
50
BASELINE
S-4
S-6
45 SS 60 70 6s 95 100 115
SESSIONS
Fig. 4. Middle-link response rates as a function of sessions during the middle-link delay condition and during
adjacent baseline conditions.
ued further. Return to baseline after the delay
condition produced an immediate increase in
rate for all subjects. The rates of responding
finally attained during the postdelay baseline
were generally comparable to response rates
during the predelay baseline.
Figure 5 shows the mean response rates in
each component of the chain during the last
five sessions of the terminal-link delay con-
dition (hatched bars) and the mean response
rate in each component during the last five
sessions of the immediately preceding baseline
condition (solid bars). A decline in terminal-
link response rates during the terminal-link
delay condition was evident for 4 subjects,
whereas terminal-link response rates in-
creased for the remaining 2 subjects. There
was no systematic effect of the terminal-link
delay contingency on response rates in either
the initial or middle links.
Session-by-session terminal-link response
rates during the terminal-link delay condition
and its preceding baseline are plotted in Fig-
ure 6. Response rates were considerably more
variable than were those shown in Figures 2
and 4, both across sessions and across subjects.
For 2 subjects (S-3, S-4), there was a regular
decline across sessions, much like that seen in
the earlier conditions. For 2 others (S-2, S-5),
there was an increase in rate, which occurred
during the first 5 to 10 sessions of exposure
to the delay condition. Response rates for these
48
BASELINE DELAY
70
60
S0
40
30
20
10 S-i
45 SS 6s 75 58 9S 10 110
SESSIONS
Ian .I
I
I
I
I
f
4
1
II
CONDITIONED REINFORCEMENT IN CHAIN SCHEDULES
Si
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
TERMML
160
MIDLE TERMINAL
MIDDLE
140
120
100
0
60
40
20
0
250
200
150
100
50
0
TEMIINAL
S4
NTIAL MIDDLE TERMNAL
S5
INITIAL MIDOLE TEAItL
S6
NTIAL
COMPONENT
Fig. 5. Response rate (responses/minute) in each component of the chain during baseline (solid bars) and during
the terminal-link delay condition. Ordinate scaling varies across subjects.
2 subjects then remained elevated for the du-
ration of the delay condition. For the remain-
ing 2 subjects (S-1, S-6), there was an overall
decrease in rate, but performance was highly
erratic across sessions, often changing by 30
to 50 responses per minute across successive
sessions. Possible reasons for this variability
will be considered in the Discussion.
Figure 7 summarizes the above findings by
averaging response rates in each component
across all 6 subjects for each of the three delay
conditions and their corresponding baselines.
BSLINE
0 DELAY|
49
160 T
140
120
100
80
60
40
20
0 4
140
w
120
z
100
Z 80
w
a.
60
(I)
w
U) 40
z
0
a. 20
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lr A J.
IMTIAL mILE
S2
INITIAL
S3
60
50
30
20
10
0
NTIAL
I
I
I
I
I
U I
PAUL ROYALTY, BEN A. WILLIAMS, and EDMUND FANTINO
BASELINE DELAY BASELINE DELAY
S-i
120 130 140 1S0 160 170 180
30
10
50 S-2
30 ....................................
120 130 140 150 160 .170 160
r0
10 5-3
lo S-3 >
O
90
60
70
60
50
40
30 I S-4
20 --
120 130 140 150 160 170 160
200
iao J/
160
120
100
80
60 S-5
40
120 130 140 1S0 160 170 160
240
220
200 l
160
160
140
120
100
80
60 S-6
120 130 140 150 1601 20 1 30 1 40 1SO1S60
SESSIONS SESSIONS
Fig. 6. Session-by-session terminal-link response rates during the terminal-link delay condition and during the
immediately preceding baseline condition.
The upper panel shows the rates during the
initial-link delay condition; middle-link de-
lay-condition rates are shown in the middle
panel; and terminal-link delay-condition re-
sponse rates are found in the lower panel. Ev-
ident in this figure is the specificity of the
effect of the unsignaled delay contingency.
Within each panel, response rates in the com-
ponent followed by the delay decreased dra-
matically from baseline levels, whereas the
rates in the remaining two components were
largely unaffected by the delay contingency.
Recall that the unsignaled delay contin-
gency specifies only the maximum delay be-
tween the last response in one component and
the onset of the next component. Table 2 shows
the average delays actually occurring in each
of the three delay conditions, recorded as de-
scribed above. Although there is some vari-
ability, in general the longest obtained delays
occurred in the initial-link delay condition, and
the shortest obtained delays were found in the
terminal-link delay condition. An exception to
this trend may be seen in the data for Subject
5 where the shortest obtained delay, 0.68 s,
occurred in the initial-link delay condition, and
the longest delay, 1.14 s, occurred in the mid-
dle-link delay condition. Note, however, that
even this modest initial-link delay was never-
theless sufficient to produce a robust response
rate decrease of 53 responses per minute.
Table 3 shows the obtained interreinforce-
160
160
140
120
100
60
60
40
20
13
w
a:
w
CO)
z
0
C)
w
a:
6
01
7
5
I
170 ISO
CONDITIONED REINFORCEMENT IN CHAIN SCHEDULES
COMPONENT
Fig. 7. Response rate (response/minute) in each com-
ponent of the chain averaged across subjects for the initial-
link delay condition and corresponding baseline (upper
panel), middle-link delay condition and corresponding
baseline (middle panel), and terminal-link delay condition
and corresponding baseline (bottom panel). Ordinate scal-
ing varies among panels.
ment intervals for each of the three delay con-
ditions and the mean of the obtained inter-
reinforcement intervals (IRIs) for the three
baseline conditions. In general, the increase in
obtained IRIs over baseline levels was greatest
Table 2
Mean obtained delays (in seconds).
Subject
Condition 1 2 3 4 5 6
Initial-link delay 2.52 2.18 2.29 1.64 0.68 2.80
Middle-link delay 1.84 1.51 2.01 2.53 1.14 1.95
Terminal-link delay 1.09 0.63 2.11 1.07 0.73 1.13
when the delay occurred after the initial link
and smallest when the delay occurred after the
terminal link. With the exception of the ini-
tial-link delay condition for Subject 6, how-
ever, in no instance did the obtained IRI dur-
ing a delay condition exceed the baseline IRI
by more than 7.5 s, and in six instances, the
obtained IRIs during delay conditions were
actually less than the baseline IRIs.
DISCUSSION
The present data demonstrate that behavior
in the initial and middle links of a three-link
chain schedule is maintained by the contin-
gency between responding and access to the
succeeding stimulus of the chain. Interposing
a brief delay between responding and access
to the succeeding stimulus produced major
decrements in response rate. Such effects can-
not be explained by increases in the temporal
distance to primary reinforcement signaled by
the different stimuli correlated with the dif-
ferent links, because the delay procedure had
no effect on the overall …
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