Abstract: | ![]() 16 male Holtzman rats were assigned to each of 4 groups; Ss were given a 14-pellet reward for 60 runway acquisition trials. During a subsequent 18-trial shift phase, one group was shifted to a 1-pellet reward on Trial 1, a 2nd was shifted on Trial 13, and a 3rd was given 1 less pellet each trial and then 1 pellet for the last 6 trials. The speeds of all 3 groups decreased to a level below that of a control group given a 1-pellet reward throughout training. All Ss were then given hurdle-jump training to escape from the 1-pellet reward to a neutral box. All 3 shifted groups showed acquisition of the response, whereas the control group did not. Results indicate that both gradual and abrupt reward reductions arouse frustration. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |