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Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior logoLink to Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
. 1983 Sep;40(2):193–210. doi: 10.1901/jeab.1983.40-193

Human observing: Maintained by stimuli correlated with reinforcement but not extinction

Edmund Fantino, David A Case
PMCID: PMC1347908  PMID: 16812343

Abstract

College students received points exchangeable for money (reinforcement) on a variable-time 60-second schedule that alternated randomly with an extinction component. Subjects were informed that responding would not influence either the rate or distribution of reinforcement. Instead, presses on either of two levers (“observing responses”) produced stimuli. In each of four experiments, stimuli positively correlated with reinforcement and/or stimuli uncorrelated with reinforcement were each chosen over stimuli correlated with extinction. These results are consistent with prior results from pigeons in supporting the conditioned-reinforcement hypothesis of observing and in not supporting the uncertainty-reduction hypothesis.

Keywords: observing behavior, conditioned reinforcement, information, uncertainty reduction, delay-reduction hypothesis, choice, response-independent reinforcement, lever press, humans

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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