Am. Karkowski et al., RAT STRATEGIES AND THE INTERACTIVE SCHEDULE - A MULTIDIMENSIONAL EXAMINATION OF BEHAVIOR, The Journal of general psychology, 123(1), 1996, pp. 63-73
The ways in which the variables time, distance, and force or effort me
diate behavior were examined. Rats' running in a running wheel under v
arious schedule conditions was studied by implementing the interactive
schedule (Berger, 1988), a schedule in which a continuum of reinforce
ment contingencies is used. The variables of time and distance were ma
nipulated via four points on the continuum. One point was a pure fixed
-interval schedule, one was a pure fixed-ratio schedule, and the remai
ning two points on the continuum were hybrids of those two schedules.
Additionally, the effect of effort on behavior was examined by setting
the tangential force requirement on the running wheel to 20 g or 80 g
, resulting in eight conditions. The dependent measures were distance
per session, reinforcers per session, distance per reinforcer, and mov
e speed. Results indicated that the rats responded in a manner that wa
s neither a pure time-minimization strategy nor a pure distance-minimi
zation strategy, suggesting that rats attend to the dimensions of time
and distance simultaneously. Additionally, increased force and effort
suppressed the rats' running under all schedule conditions. The impor
tance of studying foraging behavior within a multidimensional model vi
ewpoint is discussed.