| Literature DB >> 23589090 |
Elizabeth J Powell1, Martha Escobar, Whitney Kimble.
Abstract
Spontaneous recovery in extinction appears to be inversely related to the acquisition-to-extinction interval, but it remains unclear why this is the case. Rat subjects trained with one of three interference paradigms exhibited less spontaneous recovery of the original response after delayed than immediate interference, regardless of whether interference resulted in attenuated fear (extinction, CS-Shock followed by CS-noShock), acquisition of conditioned fear (latent inhibition, CS-noShock followed by CS-Shock), or acquisition of a response (counterconditioning, CS-Shock followed by CS-Sucrose). We suggest that delaying interference treatment increases the relative similarity of the interference and test contexts, facilitating retrieval of the interfering association and attenuating recovery of the original response.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23589090 PMCID: PMC3630488 DOI: 10.1101/lm.030650.113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Learn Mem ISSN: 1072-0502 Impact factor: 2.460