Abstract
Rats were permitted to control, by means of a changeover response, the amount of time spent in either a "differentiated" or an "undifferentiated" condition. Shock occurred in both conditions on the same variable-time schedule, half of the shocks being short (.75 sec) in duration, the other half, long (5 sec). In the differentiated (informative) condition, all short shocks were preceded by one signal and all long shocks were preceded by a discriminatively different signal. No information about shock duration was available in the undifferentiated condition, as the same signal preceded short and long shocks. A clear and consistent preference emerged for the differentiated condition, i.e., for information about shock duration. The relevance of this finding for theories which attempt to account for the preference-for-signaled-shock phenomenon was discussed. © 1979 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
D’Amato, M. R., & Safarjan, W. R. (1979). Preference for information about shock duration in rats. Animal Learning & Behavior, 7(1), 89–94. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209663
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