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Divided Control by Past Behavior, Present Stimuli, and Future Outcome Value in a Concurrent-Chains Procedure

Authors

Gomes-Ng, Stef
Austin, Tess
Bai, John YH
Landon, Jason
Cowie, Sarah

Supervisor

Item type

Journal Article

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

When multiple stimuli appear to signal behavior–reinforcer contingencies, control may be divided between those stimuli. Such divided stimulus control depends in part on the value of the outcome to the organism, with stimuli signaling more valuable outcomes exerting stronger control. The present experiment investigated how divided control by past and present stimuli interacts with outcome value. Pigeons responded in a concurrent-chains procedure in which one terminal link ended with two food deliveries after 8 s and the other link ended with six food deliveries after 48 s. Outcomes were signaled by the response producing terminal-link entry (past behavior) as well as keylight stimuli during initial links (past signals) and terminal links (present signals). When these sources of stimulus control conflicted, past behavior exerted strong control over terminal-link responding, overshadowing control by past signals. Some control by present signals was also evident, particularly at later times in terminal links. Additionally, stimuli signaling pigeons' more preferred outcome (smaller-sooner reinforcer) exerted stronger control than stimuli signaling the less preferred (larger-later) outcome. These findings highlight the importance of subjective outcome value in stimulus control and demonstrate that egocentric stimuli can exert enduring behavioral control even when other less transient discriminative stimuli occurred in the recent past or present.

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Keywords

1701 Psychology, 1702 Cognitive Sciences, Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology, 5201 Applied and developmental psychology, 5202 Biological psychology, 5204 Cognitive and computational psychology

Source

Journal of The Experimental Analysis of Behavior, ISSN: 0022-5002 (Print); 1938-3711 (Online), Wiley, 125(2). doi: 10.1002/jeab.70087

Rights statement

© 2026 The Author(s). Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.