| Literature DB >> 15825883 |
Gabrielle Weidemann1, E James Kehoe.
Abstract
Three experiments demonstrated that, following the extinction of an established conditioned stimulus (CSA--e.g., tone), the pairing of a novel, cross-modal stimulus (CSB--e.g., light) with the unconditioned stimulus (US) results in strong recovery of responding to the extinguished CSA. Experiment 1 demonstrated that the recovery of responding to CSA is not the result of US reinstatement but is attributable to pairings of CSB with the US. Experiment 2 demonstrated that the recovery of responding is specific to CSA and is not the result of cross-modal generalization. Experiment 3 revealed that a large number of CSB-US pairings in Stage 1 significantly reduced the amount of recovery to CSA during subsequent CSB-US trials. Experiment 3 also provided unexpected evidence of cross-modal secondary extinction. The extinction and subsequent recovery of responding seen in the present experiments is discussed with respect to possible contributions from contextual associations, CS processing, US processing, conditioned response expression, and layered excitatory associations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15825883 DOI: 10.3758/bf03196038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Learn Behav ISSN: 1543-4494 Impact factor: 1.986