1979
DOI: 10.3758/bf03209655
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Schedule-induced drinking facilitates schedule-controlled feeding

Abstract: Four food-deprived rats barpressed with food reinforeement on a I-min fixed-interval sehedule in 7-h sessions with water either present or absent. They all became polydipsic, drinking after many pellets early in sessions but after fewer pellets later in sessions. Pellets were seeured at near maximum rates for about 3 h. Thereafter, the three heaviest drinkers obtained more food with water than without it. The results indieate that schedule-indueed drinking does not eontinue indefinitely and that it ean be adap… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…When drinking is prevented entirely during intermittent food reinforcement, food-entrained drinking and the rate at which rats secure food both decline after some hours, in line with the view of Keehn and Riusech (1979) . Partial availability prevents the decline in rate of eating and at the same time enhances the durations of drinks when they become possible.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 51%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…When drinking is prevented entirely during intermittent food reinforcement, food-entrained drinking and the rate at which rats secure food both decline after some hours, in line with the view of Keehn and Riusech (1979) . Partial availability prevents the decline in rate of eating and at the same time enhances the durations of drinks when they become possible.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 51%
“…On the other hand, if entrainment is the principal consequence of intermittent feeding, with volume ingested a dramatic by-product, then overall consumptions of food and water are less interesting than are particular correspondences beween a meal and a drink. From this view, Keehn and Riusech (1979) suggest that drinking water makes dry food pellets more reinforcing, just as mixing ingredients improves some foods.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Induced drinking is also highly reliable by behavioral standards: it occurs in virtually 100070 of subjects and accompanies virtually every food reinforcement even in sessions lasting several hours (Keehn & Riusech, 1979). Consequently, little critical attention has been given to the question of how to assess the degree to which the schedule of food reinforcement enhances drinking.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Allen and Weidinger (1980) and Shurtleff, Delamater, and Riley (1983) have reported the development and maintenance of polydipsia on RT schedules that appears not to differ from that observed on fixed time (FT) or variable time (VT) schedules. An intermediate pattern of results has been reported by Keehn and Burton (1978), who did observe the development of drinking on an RI 6O-sec schedule, although this drinking was lower than that observed on a FI 6O-sec schedule. In the present experiments, we attempted to further investigate the conditions under which RT schedules of reinforcement do (or do not) induce polydipsia.…”
mentioning
confidence: 73%