Response stereotypy in humans maintained by response-contingent events

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Abstract

The present study examined stereotyped behaviors developed during human performances that were generated by response-dependent intermittent schedules of reinforcement. Thirty university students were assigned to either fixed-interval 30-s or fixed-ratio 30-s schedules in which points or monetary reinforcers were produced only by presses on the number keys of a 41-key computer keyboard. Behavior patterns developed by all subjects were classified into four categories: optimal, random, unique, and general stereotypes. The general stereotypes category was further subdivided into five idiosyncratic types: connection, order, shift, repeat, and restriction. Analysis of the data demonstrated the role of contiguity: Whatever behavior happened to precede reinforcers was repeated even though reinforcers did not depend on that behavior. These findings support the argument that much of idiosyncratic and stereotyped human behavior is produced and maintained by contingencies of reinforcement, rather than schedule-induced or adjunctive behavior. © 1997 Japanese Psychological Association. Published by Blackwell Publishers Ltd.

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APA

Ono, K. (1997). Response stereotypy in humans maintained by response-contingent events. Japanese Psychological Research, 39(4), 277–290. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-5884.00060

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