Davies Anna C, Nicol Christine J, Radford Andrew N
Animal Welfare and Behaviour Group, School of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, U.K.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, U.K.
Anim Behav. 2015 Jul;105:21-28. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2015.04.005.
When a reward is downgraded in quantity or quality from that which is expected, one of two possible outcomes can result. Acquisition responses may decline gradually, owing to a strong stimulus-response reinforcement history, and thus follow the Thorndikian law of effect. Alternatively, there may be an exaggerated reaction to a downgraded reward when it is initially altered, compared to the behaviour of individuals that have always been trained to receive the lower magnitude reward; this is known as successive negative contrast (SNC). While behavioural SNC effects have been commonly demonstrated in mammals, evidence that they occur in other taxa is more equivocal. Additionally, studies demonstrating immediate physiological reactions during reward downshifts are limited. We investigated the reaction of chickens, , to a downshift in the quality of a food reward that they had been trained to expect in a runway apparatus. During a preshift phase, 16 chickens (control) were given food that was flavoured to make it less preferred, while the other 16 (contrast) were fed the same food but without flavouring. During trial 7, unflavoured food was substituted by flavoured food for contrast hens and all birds were fed the flavoured food during a postshift phase. In the contrast group, food consumption immediately decreased and heart rate increased when the reward was downshifted from unflavoured to flavoured food, but there was no evidence of SNC effects, which could stem from methodological or taxonomic differences from previous studies. The latency to reach the food appeared to follow the Thorndikian law of effect, gradually increasing following the downshift. We suggest that the disparity between the pattern shown by the latency results and other measures could relate to the time period in which measures were taken, as acquisition responses are more likely to follow the law of effect.
当奖励的数量或质量低于预期时,可能会产生两种结果之一。由于强烈的刺激-反应强化历史,习得反应可能会逐渐下降,从而遵循桑代克效果律。或者,与一直接受较低强度奖励训练的个体的行为相比,当奖励最初改变时,对降级奖励可能会有过度反应;这被称为连续负对比(SNC)。虽然行为SNC效应在哺乳动物中普遍得到证实,但它们在其他分类群中出现的证据则更不明确。此外,证明奖励降低时立即产生生理反应的研究也很有限。我们研究了鸡在跑道装置中对它们已习惯预期的食物奖励质量下降的反应。在预转换阶段,16只鸡(对照组)被给予加了味道使其不那么受欢迎的食物,而另外16只(对比组)则喂食相同的食物但没有加味道。在第7次试验中,对比组母鸡的无味食物被换成了有味食物,并且在转换后阶段所有鸡都被喂食有味食物。在对比组中,当奖励从无味食物降级为有味食物时,食物消耗量立即下降,心率增加,但没有SNC效应的证据,这可能源于与先前研究在方法或分类学上的差异。到达食物处的潜伏期似乎遵循桑代克效果律,在奖励降级后逐渐增加。我们认为潜伏期结果所示模式与其他测量结果之间的差异可能与测量的时间段有关,因为习得反应更有可能遵循效果律。