D. Elliffe et M. Davison, CLOSED-ECONOMY MULTIPLE-SCHEDULE PERFORMANCE - EFFECTS OF DEPRIVATIONAND SESSION DURATION, Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior, 65(1), 1996, pp. 111-128
Three pigeons responded for food reinforcement on multiple variable-in
terval schedules in which the total consumption of food was entirely d
etermined by the subjects' interaction with the schedules (a closed ec
onomy). The finding of overmatching, where response allocation between
components is more extreme than the distribution of reinforcers, was
reconfirmed. Generalized-matching sensitivity decreased from overmatch
ing to undermatching values typical of conventional multiple schedules
when food deprivation was increased by decreasing session duration, b
ut not when deprivation was increased by decreasing overall reinforcer
rate. Sensitivity also increased from undermatching to overmatching a
s session duration increased from 100 min to 24 hr, while deprivation
was held constant by decreasing overall reinforcer rate. These results
can be understood in terms of increases in the value of extraneous re
inforcers relative to food reinforcers as deprivation decreases or as
the economy for extraneous reinforcers becomes more closed. However, n
o published quantitative expression of the effects of extraneous reinf
orcers is entirely consistent with the results.