“…We focused on response rates because a growing literature (e.g., Binder, 1996;Bucklin, Dickinson, & Brethower, 2001;Kubina & Wolfe, 2005) suggests that procedures that promote fluency can promote important learning outcomes, such as retention (i.e., appropriate, high-rate behavior persists long after training is completed), endurance (i.e., appropriate, high-rate behavior persists for durations greater than the durations of practice sessions), application (i.e., behavior can easily combine with other behaviors to form composites), and adduction (i.e., behaviors combine to form new behavior with little or no additional instruction). Presumably, procedures that produce many fluent editing skills could help editors easily eliminate previously encountered and novel stylistic problems, long after training (Binder, 2004; see the discussion of fluency by Johnson & Layng, 1996).…”