Response‐dependent point loss and response force as disrupting operations on behavioral resistance to change in humans

Author:

Costa Carlos Eduardo1ORCID,Luiz André Connor de Méo123,Carmona Lucas Franco1,Ponce Guilherme Dutra1,Banaco Roberto Alves4,Lattal Kennon A.5

Affiliation:

1. Universidade Estadual de Londrina Londrina PR Brazil

2. Integral: Engenharia Comportamental Londrina PR Brazil

3. Instituto Continuum Londrina PR Brazil

4. Instituto Par ‐ Ciências do Comportamento São Paulo SP Brazil

5. West Virginia University Morgantown WV USA

Abstract

AbstractBehavioral momentum theory (BMT) provides a theoretical and methodological framework for understanding how differentially maintained operant responding resists disruption. A common way to test operant resistance involves contingencies with suppressive effects, such as extinction or prefeeding. Other contingencies with known suppressive effects, such as response‐cost procedures arranged as point‐loss or increases in response force, remain untested as disruptive events within the BMT framework. In the present set of three experiments, responding of humans was maintained by point accumulation programmed according to a multiple variable‐interval (VI) VI schedule with different reinforcement rates in either of two components. Subsequently, subtracting a point following each response (Experiment 1) or increasing the force required for the response to be registered (Experiments 2 and 3 decreased response rates, but responding was less disrupted in the component associated with the higher reinforcement rate. The point‐loss contingency and increased response force similarly affected response rates by suppressing responding and human persistence, replicating previous findings with humans and nonhuman animals when other types of disruptive events (e.g., extinction and prefeeding) were investigated. The present findings moreover extend the generality of the effects of reinforcement rate on persistence, and thus BMT, extending the analysis of resistance to two well‐known manipulations used to reduce responding in the experimental analysis of behavior.

Funder

Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

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