Sixteen rats were initially exposed for 50 sessions to either a fixed-ratio 40 or an interresponse-time-greater-than-l1-second food reinforcement schedule, then shifted to a fixedinterval 15-second food reinforcement schedule. Animals with fixed-ratio 40 histories lever pressed at much higher rates under the fixed-interval schedule than did animals with interresponse-time-greater-than-11-second histories. This difference persisted across 93 sessions of fixed-interval exposure. The effects of d-amphetamine were assessed after 15 and 59 sessions of fixed-interval exposure. On both occasions, the low-rate responding of animals with interresponse-time-greater-than-l1-second histories was typically increased by all doses of the drug, while the high-rate responding of animals with fixed-ratio 40 histories was typically decreased by all doses of the drug. These results suggest that control response rate under the fixed-interval schedule, which may be affected by a history of responding under another schedule, is the primary determinant of the relative effects of d-amphetamine.Key words: operant history, fixed-interval schedule, fixed-ratio schedule, IRT greaterthan-t schedule, rate dependency, d-amphetamine, lever press, ratsThe effects of most behaviorally-active drugs on a given behavior depend critically on the steady-state characteristics of that behavior in the absence of the drug (Kelleher and Morse, 1968; Thompson and Schuster, 1968). Of particular importance is the rate of occurrence of the behavior. The effects produced by a number of compounds are so strongly influenced by response rate that they are termed rate-dependent (Dews, 1958;Dews and Wenger, 1977;Kelleher and Morse, 1968). d-Amphetamine prototypically exemplifies rate-dependency: with few exceptions, low doses of this drug decrease high-rate behaviors while increasing low-rate behaviors (e.g., Clark and Steele, 1966;Dews, 1958;Poling, Urbain, and Thompson, 1977;Smith, 1964).A number of factors may influence the rate of occurrence of a particular behavior. Rein-