Variable Reinforcement

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Should A Variable Schedule of Reinforcement Be Used?

Written by Chris Biro, all rights reserved.

The Question: "As advised by a friend of mine who trains dolphins and killer whales, I'm now using variable reinforcement so she does not get a seed every single time she comes to me. I'm hoping this is the right thing to do. Can anyone verify that?"

Actually I think it all depends on the behavior you are working on building. During the training phase I ALWAYS give a reinforcer for EVERY correct performance. But what is a correct performance? That depends entirely on the element of the behavior you are currently working on.

Flying to you is a very broad definition. Do you mean flying to you when called? Immediately flying toward you when called? And just how long is too long of a delay before the bird flies to you when called? If you are in fact working on a quick response to recall, then where you are in this will determine what is the "correct" behavior. Every correct behavior should be reinforced with a treat. The only performances that should occasionally not get reinforced are the behaviors that are only close to your criteria standard. And the only behaviors that should never be reinforced are those behaviors that are way below your standard - even this is not absolute because sometimes we need to back up a few steps or relax a previous criteria to get another started. And all of this should mean that the bird is being reinforced for about 8 out of 10 (4 of 5) responses. From an observer's view, this could look like a variable schedule but really it is basic differential reinforcement - the selective reinforcement of one aspect of a behavior pattern to the exclusion of other aspects. The reinforcement schedule is not actually being varied - rarely do animal trainers train with such precise record keeping to actually use a variable schedule.

So to answer your question directly, I believe that when training a behavior it is important to offer a seed every time the bird does the behavior correctly. Once the behavior is fully trained, then you can start relaxing the rate of reinforcement to a point that will continue to produce adequate response levels.

Parrots: more than pets, friends for life.

Chris Biro

chrisbiro@whidbey.net

(206) 618-2610

www.wingingitadventures.com

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