Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
J Exp Anal Behav. 2012 Sep;98(2):199-212. doi: 10.1901/jeab.2012.98-199.
Virtual organisms animated by a selectionist theory of behavior dynamics worked on concurrent random interval schedules where both the rate and magnitude of reinforcement were varied. The selectionist theory consists of a set of simple rules of selection, recombination, and mutation that act on a population of potential behaviors by means of a genetic algorithm. An extension of the power function matching equation, which expresses behavior allocation as a joint function of exponentiated reinforcement rate and reinforcer magnitude ratios, was fitted to the virtual organisms' data, and over a range of moderate mutation rates was found to provide an excellent description of their behavior without residual trends. The mean exponents in this range of mutation rates were 0.83 for the reinforcement rate ratio and 0.68 for the reinforcer magnitude ratio, which are values that are comparable to those obtained in experiments with live organisms. These findings add to the evidence supporting the selectionist theory, which asserts that the world of behavior we observe and measure is created by evolutionary dynamics.
受选择主义行为动力学理论启发的虚拟生物在同时进行的随机间隔时间表上工作,其中强化的速率和幅度都在变化。选择主义理论由一组简单的选择、重组和突变规则组成,通过遗传算法作用于潜在行为群体。扩展后的幂函数匹配方程将行为分配表示为指数强化率和强化量比的联合函数,该方程适用于虚拟生物的数据,在中等突变率范围内,它提供了对其行为的极好描述,没有剩余趋势。在这个突变率范围内的平均指数分别为强化率比的 0.83 和强化量比的 0.68,这些值与在活体生物实验中获得的值相当。这些发现为支持选择主义理论的证据增添了内容,该理论断言,我们所观察和测量的行为世界是由进化动力学创造的。