Friedrich Andrea M, Clement Tricia S, Zentall Thomas R
University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506-0044, USA.
Learn Behav. 2005 Aug;33(3):337-42. doi: 10.3758/bf03192862.
Clement, Feltus, Kaiser, and Zentall (2000) found that when pigeons have to work to obtain a discriminative stimulus that is followed by reinforcement, they prefer a discriminative stimulus that requires greater effort over one that requires less effort. The authors suggested that such a preference results from the greater change in hedonic value that occurs between the more aversive event and the onset of the stimulus that signals reinforcement, a contrast effect. It was hypothesized that any stimulus that follows a relatively more aversive event would be preferred over a stimulus that follows a relatively less aversive event. In the present experiment, the authors tested the counterintuitive prediction of that theory, that pigeons should prefer a discriminative stimulus that follows the absence of reinforcement over a discriminative stimulus that follows reinforcement. Results supported the theory.
克莱门特、费尔图斯、凯泽和曾塔尔(2000年)发现,当鸽子必须努力获取一个随后会得到强化的辨别性刺激时,它们更喜欢需要付出更多努力的辨别性刺激,而非需要较少努力的刺激。作者认为,这种偏好源于在更厌恶的事件与标志着强化的刺激开始之间发生的享乐价值的更大变化,即一种对比效应。据推测,任何跟随相对更厌恶事件的刺激都会比跟随相对不那么厌恶事件的刺激更受青睐。在本实验中,作者测试了该理论的反直觉预测,即鸽子应该更喜欢在没有强化之后出现的辨别性刺激,而不是在有强化之后出现的辨别性刺激。结果支持了该理论。