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      Behavioral Momentum Theory Fails to Account for the Effects of Reinforcement Rate on Resurgence

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          Abstract

          The behavioral-momentum model of resurgence predicts reinforcer rates within a resurgence preparation should have three effects on target behavior. First, higher reinforcer rates in baseline (Phase 1) produce more persistent target behavior during extinction plus alternative reinforcement. Second, higher rate alternative reinforcement during Phase 2 generates greater disruption of target responding during extinction. Finally, higher rates of either reinforcement source should produce greater responding when alternative reinforcement is suspended in Phase 3. Recent empirical reports have produced mixed results in terms of these predictions. Thus, the present experiment further examined reinforcer-rate effects on persistence and resurgence. Rats pressed target levers for high-rate or low-rate variable-interval food during Phase 1. In Phase 2, target-lever pressing was extinguished, an alternative nose-poke became available, and nose-poking produced either high-rate variable-interval, low-rate variable-interval, or no (an extinction control) alternative reinforcement. Alternative reinforcement was suspended in Phase 3. For groups that received no alternative reinforcement, target-lever pressing was less persistent following high-rate than low-rate Phase-1 reinforcement. Target behavior was more persistent with low-rate alternative reinforcement than with high-rate alternative reinforcement or extinction alone. Finally, no differences in Phase-3 responding were observed for groups that received either high-rate or low-rate alternative reinforcement, and resurgence occurred only following high-rate alternative reinforcement. These findings are inconsistent with the momentum-based model of resurgence. We conclude this model mischaracterizes the effects of rein-forcer rates on persistence and resurgence of operant behavior.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0203727
          4719
          J Exp Anal Behav
          J Exp Anal Behav
          Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
          0022-5002
          1938-3711
          21 July 2017
          May 2016
          18 August 2017
          : 105
          : 3
          : 375-392
          Affiliations
          Utah State University
          Author notes
          Address Correspondence to Andrew R. Craig, Department of Psychology, Utah State University, 2810 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322 ( andrew.craig@ 123456aggiemail.usu.edu )
          Article
          PMC5562486 PMC5562486 5562486 nihpa893584
          10.1002/jeab.207
          5562486
          27193242
          17d4da9e-827f-474f-be4d-a6ce4ae4e95a
          History
          Categories
          Article

          extinction,operant behavior,reinforcement rate,behavioral momentum,relapse,resurgence

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