“…Noncontingent food presented concurrently with contingent food typically reduces operant activity (Dickinson & Charnock, 1985;Lattal, 1974;Rescorla, 1992;Schachtman & Reed, 1990), because according to the Law of Allocation, induced nonoperant activity competes with the operant activity. Noncontingent food may also induce formerly operant activity no longer in covariance with it, at least for a time (e.g., Baum & Grace, 2020;Herrnstein, 1966;Reid, 1958;Rescorla & Skucy, 1969). In a molar view of operant behavior, covariance occurs between responsecontingent food rate and response rate and may be represented by feedback functions within a behavior-environment feedback system (Baum, 1981(Baum, , 1989(Baum, , 2020.…”