“…These tasks offer several advantages: first, they more accurately reflect the real-world decisions between alternative choices; second, in conjunction with more conventional (within-commodity) discounting, they allow for simultaneous assessment of preference for immediate reinforcement and a particular reinforcer. Cross-commodity discounting has been assessed in cocaine users (Bickel, Landes, et al, 2011), and alcohol users (Moody, Tegge, & Bickel, 2017) and, in conjunction with within-commodity discounting, can assess relative discounting of, and utility, for each commodity (Bickel, Landes, et al, 2011). In this case, assessing discounting both across commodities (food now, money later; money now, food later) and within commodities (food now and later; money now and later) allows for the finest resolution of relative preference of the distinct effects of each of these factors, indicating how preference may shift towards or away from specific kinds of reward, independent of how that reward may be discounted.…”