Renewal, resurgence, and alternative reinforcement context.

Mary M Sweeney, Timothy A Shahan
Author Information
  1. Mary M Sweeney: Department of Psychology, Utah State University, 2810 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322, USA. Electronic address: marymsweeney@jhmi.edu.
  2. Timothy A Shahan: Department of Psychology, Utah State University, 2810 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT 84322, USA. Electronic address: tim.shahan@usu.edu.

Abstract

Resurgence, relapse induced by the removal of alternative reinforcement, and renewal, relapse induced by a change in contextual stimuli, are typically studied separately in operant conditioning paradigms. In analogous treatments of operant problem behavior, aspects of both relapse phenomena can operate simultaneously. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine a novel method for studying resurgence and renewal in the same experimental preparation. An alternative source of reinforcement was available during extinction for one group of rats (a typical resurgence preparation). Another group experienced an operant renewal preparation in which the extinction context was distinguished via olfactory and visual stimuli. A third group experienced alternative reinforcement delivery in the new context, a novel combination of typical resurgence and renewal preparations. Removal of alternative reinforcement and/or a change in context induced relapse relative to an extinction-only control group. When alternative reinforcement was delivered in a novel context, the alternative response was less persistent relative to when extinction of the alternative response took place in the context in which it was trained. This methodology might be used to illustrate shared (or distinct) mechanisms of resurgence and renewal, and to determine how delivering alternative reinforcement in another context may affect persistence and relapse.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. R01 HD064576/NICHD NIH HHS
  2. R01HD064576/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Animals
Conditioning, Operant
Cues
Extinction, Psychological
Male
Odorants
Photic Stimulation
Rats
Rats, Long-Evans
Reinforcement Schedule
Reinforcement, Psychology
Smell
Vision, Ocular

Word Cloud

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