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Combined effects of food deprivation and food frequency on the amount and temporal distribution of schedule‐induced drinking

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Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior

Published online on

Abstract

Under intermittent food schedules animals develop temporally organized behaviors throughout interfood intervals, with behaviors early in the intervals (interim) normally occurring in excess. Schedule‐induced drinking (a prototype of interim, adjunctive behavior) is related to food deprivation and food frequency. This study investigated the interactions that resulted from combining different food‐deprivation levels (70%, 80% or 90% free‐feeding weights) with different food‐occurrence frequencies (15‐, 30‐ or 60‐s interfood intervals) in a within‐subjects design. Increases in food deprivation and food frequency generally led to increased licking, with greater differences due to food deprivation as interfood intervals became shorter. Distributions of licking were modestly shifted to later in the interfood interval as interfood intervals lengthened, a result that was most marked under 90% food deprivation, which also resulted in flatter distributions. It would therefore appear that food deprivation modulates the licking rate and the distribution of licking in different ways. Effects of food deprivation and food frequency are adequately explained by a theory of adjunctive behavior based on delayed food reinforcement, in contrast to alternative hypotheses.