The Effects of Continuous Reinforcement History on Rule-Following Behavior

Authors

  • Luiz Carlos de Albuquerque
  • Adriana Alcantara dos Reis
  • Carla Cristina Paiva Paracampo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32870/ac.v14i1.14531

Keywords:

Rules, contingencies, continuous reinforcement history, matching-to-sample, university students.

Abstract

The aim of this study, carried out with 16 university students, was to investigate the effects of continuous reinforcement history on rule-following behavior. Under a matching-to-sample procedure, with three comparison stimuli, the participants were asked to point the three comparisons in a sequence, according to its dimension common to the sample. Each rule specified the response sequence. Contingency-discrepant rule following was not reinforced, whereas correspondent rule following was reinforced on a CRF schedule. Two experiments were conducted in which the rules were presented in one of two sequences: correspondent-discrepant or discrepant-cprrespondent-discrepant. In contrast to Experiment 1, the participants in Experiment 2 abandoned discrepant rule following and responded in accordance with their prior reinforcement history. These findings have implications for the identification of the variables involved in rule-following behavior.

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How to Cite

de Albuquerque, L. C., Alcantara dos Reis, A., & Paiva Paracampo, C. C. (2009). The Effects of Continuous Reinforcement History on Rule-Following Behavior. Acta Comportamentalia, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.32870/ac.v14i1.14531

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