“…Either we assume that in condition High‐Low the pigeons continued to time the moment of reversal, and then conclude, from the extremely low coefficients of variation, that they violated the scalar property of timing (Gibbon, ), or we assume that local cues, rather than time, controlled switching. Given the generality of the scalar property, the latter hypothesis seems more plausible and parsimonious (but for violations of the scalar property see Bizo, Chu, Sanabria, & Killeen, ; Grondin, ; and Zeiler & Powell, ). For some reason, then, in condition High‐Low, switching came under the control of local cues, namely the food/no food outcomes of S1 choices.…”