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Ratna in the Operant Box( 3/12/16) |
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Sniffy the Virtual Rat |
Even though my live rat, Ratna, and Sniffy the Virtual Rat were not exactly the same, they both were very beneficial to me. I
worked on Sniffy the Virtual Rat before I began training and this allowed
me to see what to expect for magazine training, shaping, and other reinforcement
schedules as well as the extinction process. Furthermore, it helped me
understand how the Operant Box worked. Personally, I felt like completing
Sniffy before moving on to training Ratna helped me a lot because I was more
comfortable about any uncertainties I had about training. One thing I liked
about Sniffy was that he could be trained in one session. In training Ratna, I
was forced to cut off the training session after 30 minutes. However since I
did not time out the sessions with Sniffy, I was not able to fully see how the
behaviors vary on different days like it did for Ratna. Furthermore, Sniffy did
not satiate or get worn-out. I tried to limit the amount of reinforcements I
gave Ratna, because I wanted her to perform the behavior throughout each
session. Ratna was also more hyper or aggressive some days and not as active
others days. Sniffy, however, had the same energy and relatively the same
behavior. It was also very helpful to visualize
Sniffy's responses because it helped me understand how cumulative records work.
The x-axis is time and the y-axis is the number of responses. Response
rate—a steep slope of the line indicates a high response rate while a flat line
indicates a low response rate. Understanding the response rates on the
cumulative record for Sniffy helped me understand the cumulative records for
Ratna.
Overall, magazine training for Ratna and
Sniffy were relatively similar besides the amount of time it took for them to
grasp the technique. Magazine training took
Sniffy about 15 minutes, while Ratna took 21 minutes to be fully magazine trained. I
was able to keep both Sniffy and Ratna interested in the food magazine area by
rewarding them immediately. Sniffy and Ratna quickly learned the association
between the magazine and the delivery reinforcement. One difference I noticed
was that if Ratna was on the opposite side of the Operant Box and I wanted her
to come back to the magazine, she would respond to the delivery of the reinforcement
and come back to the correct side. Sniffy on the other hand did not. Sniffy
continued his behavior for a few minutes before slowly going back to the
magazine. Furthermore, Sniffy had to rear over the lever in order to be considered
magazine trained, while this was not the case for Ratna.
Shaping
Sniffy was definitely way easier than shaping Ratna. The program for Sniffy had
a low variability of behaviors compared to the Ratna’s assortment of behaviors.
For Sniffy it was easy to just watch the bar-sound graph's progress and see the
trend behaviors to reinforce. For
example, Sniffy had to rear up to receive reinforcements. Ratna on the other
hand was reinforced after she reared and then came down on the bar.
Furthermore, I had to change my shaping technique several times because Ratna was
not pressing the bar hard enough. One advantage I had over Ratna’s various behaviors
is it allowed me to determine which behaviors to reinforce quickly for her to
gain an association. Shaping took Sniffy 1 hour to complete, and for Ratna it took over 7+ hours over the course of two-three weeks to
shape her partially( **** See Shaping Blog Day 8-14 for Cumulative Recorders).
All
in all, I found it very useful to train the virtual rat before training my live
rat. Sniffy the Virtual Rat helped me pay close attention to the behavior
performed because if I missed a behavior that should have been reinforced, then
the bar-sound association graph decreased. This essentially helped me pay very
close attention to Ratna throughout my shaping training sessions. Due to Ratna's
high variability of behavior, time constraints, and Ratna’s compliance, I was
only able to partially complete the shaping technique. I highly recommend using
Sniffy for future classes. I also believe that requiring the students to do all
the different types of reinforcement schedules in Sniffy will be beneficial because it
will help them understand how the behaviors vary across the different
schedules.