J Exp Anal Behav. 1996 May;65(3):603-18. doi: 10.1901/jeab.1996.65-603.
Two experiments used response-initiated delay schedules to test the idea that when food reinforcement is available at regular intervals, the time an animal waits before its first operant response (waiting time) is proportional to the immediately preceding interfood interval (linear waiting; Wynne & Staddon, 1988). In Experiment 1 the interfood intervals varied from cycle to cycle according to one of four sinusoidal sequences with different amounts of added noise. Waiting times tracked the input cycle in a way which showed that they were affected by interfood intervals earlier than the immediately preceding one. In Experiment 2 different patterns of long and short interfood intervals were presented, and the results implied that waiting times are disproportionately influenced by the shortest of recent interfood intervals. A model based on this idea is shown to account for a wide range of results on the dynamics of timing behavior.
当食物强化物以固定的间隔提供时,动物在第一次操作性反应之前等待的时间(等待时间)与前一个食物间隔(线性等待;Wynne 和 Staddon,1988)成正比。在实验 1 中,食物间隔根据四个具有不同噪声量的正弦序列之一从一个循环变化到另一个循环。等待时间以一种跟踪输入循环的方式显示出,它们受到比前一个更早的食物间隔的影响。在实验 2 中,呈现了不同模式的长食物间隔和短食物间隔,结果表明等待时间受到最近食物间隔中最短的食物间隔的不成比例的影响。基于这个想法的一个模型被证明可以解释计时行为动力学的广泛结果。