Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • behavior (2)
  • generalizes (1)
  • rats (3)
  • reward (4)
  • self control (1)
  • smaller (6)
  • time factors (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Interventions exposing rats to delayed-reward contingencies attenuate suboptimal impulsive choices, a preference for a smaller-sooner (SS) over a larger-later (LL) reward. Interventions may potentially improve delay-tolerance, timing of delays, and/or discrimination of reward magnitudes. Generalization from the intervention to impulsive choice under different procedures can provide insights into the processes that underlie the intervention effects. Experiment 1 tested intervention effects on systematic-delay (SYS) and adjusting-delay (ADJ) procedures, predicting that intervention effects would be more effective on the SYS procedure with predictable delays. The ADJ procedure did not benefit significantly from intervention, but the SYS procedure, unexpectedly, showed greater impulsive choices following intervention. Experiment 2 tested whether short (5 s) SS intervention delays may have promoted greater impulsivity in the SYS impulsive choice procedure in Experiment 1. Short SS delays in choice and intervention procedures increased impulsive choices in comparison to longer (10 s) delays. Incongruent SS delays in the intervention/choice procedures resulted in negative intervention effects. The results suggest that short SS delays are detrimental to self-control and that specific temporal information generalizes from the intervention to the SYS choice task, but not the ADJ choice task. Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

    Citation

    Travis R Smith, Kelsey Panfil, Kimberly Kirkpatrick. Generalizability of time-based interventions: Effects of choice procedure and smaller-sooner delay. Behavioural processes. 2022 Mar;196:104584

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags


    PMID: 35033629

    View Full Text