1963
DOI: 10.1037/h0048591
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Effect of strength of punishment for "correct" or "incorrect" responses on visual discrimination performance.

Abstract: The purpose was to investigate the effect of variation in shock intensity on the acquisition of a black-white discrimination by 56 white rats in a situation involving shock for the correct or incorrect response, a noncorrection procedure, and 2 different training methods (free-vs. forcedchoice). Differences in outcome between training methods were negligible. Shock intensity functions showed that errors increased with increasing intensities for shock-right groups, decreased with increasing intensities for shoc… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Punishment of incorrect responses plus reinforcement of correct responses produces lower error rates than does reinforcement alone (Boe & Church, 1968;Hemry, 1973;Trent, 1983;Warden & Aylesworth, 1927;Wischner, Fowler, & Kushnick, 1963;Witte & Grossman, 1971) or punishment alone (Brackbill & O'Hara, 1958;Wright & Smothergill, 1967). Those outcomes are replicable despite the species, and despite varying degrees of intellectual capability (Foxx, 1984;Harris & Tramontana, 1973).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Punishment of incorrect responses plus reinforcement of correct responses produces lower error rates than does reinforcement alone (Boe & Church, 1968;Hemry, 1973;Trent, 1983;Warden & Aylesworth, 1927;Wischner, Fowler, & Kushnick, 1963;Witte & Grossman, 1971) or punishment alone (Brackbill & O'Hara, 1958;Wright & Smothergill, 1967). Those outcomes are replicable despite the species, and despite varying degrees of intellectual capability (Foxx, 1984;Harris & Tramontana, 1973).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consistent with this interpretation, the "shock-right" facilitation effect is typically absent in an easy discrimination in which the discriminative stimuli (e.g., light-dark) are highly dissimilar and hence preclude a distinctive-cue function of the shock (e.g., Wischner & Fowler, 1964;Wischner, Fowler, & Kushnick, 1963); in contrast, the facilitation effect is consistently observed in more difficult (e.g., bright-dim) discriminations in which the discriminative stimuli are similar and thus potentiate the shock's cue function (e.g., Fowler, Spelt, & Wischner, 1967;Fowler & Wischner, 1965). Furthermore, if the aversiveness of the shock is reduced through the administration of sodium amytal (Fowler, Goldman, & Wischner, 1968), the facilitation occurring in a difficult discrimination is, within limits, an increasing S-shaped function of shock intensity, consistent with the Weber principle relating performance to the discriminable cue properties (e.g., the intensity) of a stimulus.…”
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confidence: 53%
“…Alguns desses estudos descreveram condições no treino com punição que poderiam ser essenciais para que esse efeito facilitador fosse observado; duas particularmente parecem ser de especial interesse para futuras investigações: (1) a complexidade dos estímulos discriminativos e (2) a intensidade do estímulo aversivo. A literatura tem demonstrado que quanto mais proeminentes as dimensões do estímulo a serem discriminadas e quanto menor o número de dimensões irrelevantes a serem ignoradas, mais rapidamente se daria a aquisição, particularmente quando as consequências são mantidas por reforço negativo (Meyer & Offenbach, 1962;Wischner, Fowler, & Kushnick, 1963;Yerkes & Dodson, 1908). Esse aspecto nos parece interessante particularmente quando observamos que, no presente trabalho, um número relativamente menor de participantes reverteu o responder nos blocos discrepantes, quando comparados com os resultados de estudos similares (Albuquerque et al, 2004;Paracampo et al, 2007;Pinto et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionunclassified