Literature DB >> 22521549

The extinction context enables extinction performance after a change in context.

James Byron Nelson1, Pamela Gregory, Maria del Carmen Sanjuan.   

Abstract

One experiment with human participants determined the extent to which recovery of extinguished responding with a context switch was due to a failure to retrieve contextually controlled learning, or some other process such as participants learning that context changes signal reversals in the meaning of stimulus-outcome relationships. In a video game, participants learned to suppress mouse clicking in the presence of a stimulus that predicted an attack. Then, that stimulus underwent extinction in a different context (environment within the game). Following extinction, suppression was recovered and then extinguished again during testing in the conditioning context. In a final test, participants that were tested in the context where extinction first took place showed less of a recovery than those tested in a neutral context, but they showed a recovery of suppression nevertheless. A change in context tended to cause a change in the meaning of the stimulus, leading to recovery in both the neutral and extinction contexts. The extinction context attenuated that recovery, perhaps by enabling retrieval of the learning that took place in extinction. Recovery outside an extinction context is due to a failure of the context to enable the learning acquired during extinction, but only in part.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22521549      PMCID: PMC3461305          DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2012.04.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Processes        ISSN: 0376-6357            Impact factor:   1.777


  12 in total

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Review 8.  Context, time, and memory retrieval in the interference paradigms of Pavlovian learning.

Authors:  M E Bouton
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10.  Contextual control of the extinction of conditioned fear: tests for the associative value of the context.

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  1 in total

1.  Contextual control of conditioning is not affected by extinction in a behavioral task with humans.

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  1 in total

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