The effects of the intertrial interval (lTI) on learning and performance in Pavlovian appetitive serial feature positive (SFP) discriminations were examined in three experiments with rats, Withlonger ITIs, acquisition was more rapid, and there was less transfer of the feature's behavioral control to a separately trained target cue, suggesting that longer ITIs encouraged the use of an occasion setting strategy. Behavior was also affected by discrimination-specific ITIs. Rats were trained with two SFP discriminations. The overall ITI was held constant, but the intervals between trials of one discrimination were varied by intermixing different numbers of trials from the other discrimination. Learning was more rapid when the intervals between trials of a single discrimination were longer. A sequential analyses showed that performance on a trial was impaired when it was preceded by a trial that included the same target cue but with the opposite trial outcome. The results are discussed in the frameworks of proactive interference effects and deletion-comparator processes (Cooper, Aronson, Balsam, & Gibbon, 1990.) Performance in learning tasks is often affected by the spacing oftrials. Longer intertrial intervals (ITIs) encourage superior performance in a variety of tasks, including, for example, simple nondiscriminative Pavlovian conditioning (e.g., Gormezano & Moore, 1969;Spence & Norris, 1950), delayed matching-to-sample (e.g., Grant, 1975), and operant serial feature positive discrimination training (Holland, 1995). Moreover, many researchers have found that the ITI can affect within-trial interstimuIus interval functions as well. For example, conditioning can occur with longer intervals between the onsets of the conditioned stimulus (CS) and unconditioned stimulus (US) if those CS-US pairings are separated by long ITIs than when they are massed in time (Gibbon, Baldock, Locurto, Gold, & Terrace, 1977). In fact, Gibbon et al. and other investigators (e.g., Roberts & Kraemer, 1982) have claimed that it is not the CS-US or intertrial intervals themselves that determines the amount of conditioning, but rather their ratio.Holland (1995) examined the effects ofITI on the acquisition ofoperant serial feature positive discrimination learning, in which responding during a target cue was only reinforced when that target was preceded by another, feature cue (feature~target+/target-). Acquisition of the discrimination was more rapid the longer the ITI. Furthermore, longer ITIs also seemed to favor the use of an occasion setting strategy (Holland, 1992) in solving that discrimination. That is, with shorter ITIs, the feature was This research was supported in part by grants from the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Mental Health. The author thanks Marie Crock, Corey McNamee, and John Chen for technical assistance. Correspondence should be addressed to P. C. Holland, Department of Psychology: Experimental, Duke University, Box 90086, Durham, NC 27708-0086 (e-mail: pch@duke.edu). more likely to exert dire...