Effect of Intermittent Reinforcement on Acquisition and
Retention
in Delayed Matching-To-Sample in Pigeons
Douglas S. Grant
University of Alberta
Experiments 1 and 2 involved independent
groups that received primary reinforcement after a correct match with a
probability of 1.0, .50 or .25. Correct matches that did not produce primary
reinforcement produced a conditioned reinforcer. Both
experiments revealed little evidence that acquisition or retention was
adversely affected by use of intermittent reinforcement. Experiment 3 involved a
group that received 100% reinforcement and two others that received 25%
reinforcement, one of which received conditioned reinforcement and the other
did not. Following acquisition and retention testing, birds in group 100% and
group 25% with conditioned reinforcement were exposed to 25% reinforcement and
no conditioned reinforcement. Results revealed that conditioned reinforcement
was important in promoting acquisition but was irrelevant in maintaining performance.
It was concluded that intermittent reinforcement, especially when combined with
conditioned reinforcement during acquisition, supports levels of acquisition
and retention comparable to that of continuous reinforcement. Theoretically, the findings are consistent
with an extension of Blough’s instance-based theory
of discrimination performance and, practically, they suggest that use of
intermittent reinforcement could result in increased efficiency and economy in
labs using delayed matching.