Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • behavior (2)
  • rats (1)
  • timeouts (10)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Timeouts are sometimes used in applied settings to reduce target responses, and in some circumstances delays are unavoidably imposed between the onset of a timeout and the offset of the response that produces it. The present study examined the effects of signaled and unsignaled timeouts in rats exposed to concurrent fixed-ratio 1 fixed-ratio 1 schedules of food delivery, where each response on one lever, the location of which changed across conditions, produced both food and a delayed 10-s timeout. Delays of 0 to 38 s were examined. Delayed timeouts often, but not always, substantially reduced the number of responses emitted on the lever that produced timeouts relative to the number emitted on the lever that did not produce timeouts. In general, greater sensitivity was observed to delayed timeouts when they were signaled. These results demonstrate that delayed timeouts, like other delayed consequences, can affect behavior, albeit less strongly than immediate consequences. © 2017 Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior.

    Citation

    Tom Byrne, Alan Poling. Behavioral effects of delayed timeouts from reinforcement. Journal of the experimental analysis of behavior. 2017 Mar;107(2):208-217


    PMID: 28194789

    View Full Text