Abstract
Key pecking in the pigeon was maintained under chained schedules in which the completion of one schedule component initiated the next component, and food was presented upon completion of a sequence of components. Under the chained schedules studied, a particular key color appeared during more than one component, and different key colors appeared during the other components. When seven 1-min fixed-interval components comprised a chained schedule and the response key was the same color during the first, third, fifth, and terminal components, patterns of positively accelerated responding were maintained during all but the first two components of each sequence. In general, response rates were always lowest during the first one or two components and highest during the terminal component when as few as three and as many as eight components comprised a schedule. Increasing the number of components from three to eight showed that response rate during a component increased when it was no longer one of the initial two components of the schedule, even though its temporal relation to food presentation had not changed. Finally, when seven components comprised a schedule and the response key was one color during the first, third, and fifth and a different color during the last component, response rates were low during the first five components and high during the last two components preceding food presentation.
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