Volume 107, Issue 1 pp. 39-64
Research Article

Are positive and negative reinforcement “different”? Insights from a free-operant differential outcomes effect

Michael A. Magoon

Michael A. Magoon

Auburn University

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Thomas S. Critchfield

Corresponding Author

Thomas S. Critchfield

Illinois State University

Address correspondence to: T. Critchfield, Department of Psychology, Illinois State Universiy, Normal, IL. Email: [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
Dustin Merrill

Dustin Merrill

Illinois State University

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M. Christopher Newland

M. Christopher Newland

Auburn University

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W. Joel Schneider

W. Joel Schneider

Illinois State University

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First published: 19 January 2017
Citations: 7
Michael Magoon is now an independent contractor in Portland, OR.
The research was partially supported by ICRE funds provided to Chris Newland, and a departmental research grant provided to Michael Magoon, by Auburn University.
The data are from Michael Magoon's Auburn University doctoral dissertation, conducted at Illinois State University and supervised jointly by Tom Critchfield and Chris Newland; and from Dustin Merrill's Illinois State University senior project, supervised by Tom Critchfield.
Michael Magoon is indebted to Auburn Psychology Department Chair Barry Burkhard for invaluable assistance with the adminstrative challenges of completing a Ph.D. from afar. We thank ISU Psychology Department Chair David Baron for providing a replacement computer when one of ours burst into flames, and Participant P53, who was present that day, for not hiring a lawyer; Mei-Shio Jang for capable computer programming; Stephanie Stilling for assistance with data collection. We particularly acknowledge Alan Baron for thoughtful scholarship that helped to keep aversive control in the scholarly spotlight during an era when few others were examining it.

Abstract

Although theoretical discussions typically assume that positive and negative reinforcement differ, the literature contains little unambiguous evidence that they produce differential behavioral effects. To test whether the two types of consequences control behavior differently, we pitted money-gain positive reinforcement and money-loss-avoidance negative reinforcement, scheduled through identically programmed variable-cycle schedules, against each other in concurrent schedules. Contingencies of response-produced feedback, normally different in positive and negative reinforcement, were made symmetrical. Steeper matching slopes were produced compared to a baseline consisting of all positive reinforcement. This free-operant differential outcomes effect supports the notion that that stimulus-presentation positive reinforcement and stimulus-elimination negative reinforcement are functionally “different.” However, a control experiment showed that the feedback asymmetry of more traditional positive and negative reinforcement schedules also is sufficient to create a “difference” when the type of consequence is held constant. We offer these findings as a small step in meeting the very large challenge of moving negative reinforcement theory beyond decades of relative quiescence.

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