Volume 11, Issue 2 pp. 173-176
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RESPONSE COST AND THE CONTROL OF VERBAL BEHAVIOR UNDER FREE-OPERANT AVOIDANCE SCHEDULES1

M. C. Davison

Corresponding Author

M. C. Davison

UNIVERSITY OF OTAGO, NEW ZEALAND

Psychology Dept., University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand.Search for more papers by this author
B. J. Kirkwood

B. J. Kirkwood

UNIVERSITY OF OTAGO, NEW ZEALAND

Search for more papers by this author
First published: March 1968
Citations: 7

The authors thankfully acknowledge the financial support for this research by the University Grants Committee and the Commonwealth Scholarship Committee.

Abstract

Human subjects were tested in a free-operant avoidance procedure. Shock could be avoided by the emission of a verbal response of adequate intensity and duration. These schedules were found to control the emission of verbal operants in the same way they control motor operants. Some subjects showed conventional control by this schedule with or without response-produced feedback. Other subjects verbalized at a high rate under both these conditions until the addition of response cost brought this behavior under conventional schedule control.

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