Resurgence and downshifts in alternative reinforcement rate.

Timothy A Shahan, Kaitlyn O Browning, Anthony N Nist, Gabrielle M Sutton
Author Information
  1. Timothy A Shahan: Utah State University.
  2. Kaitlyn O Browning: Utah State University.
  3. Anthony N Nist: Utah State University.
  4. Gabrielle M Sutton: Utah State University.

Abstract

Resurgence refers to an increase in a previously suppressed target behavior with a relative worsening of conditions for a more recently reinforced alternative behavior. This experiment examined the relation between resurgence and the magnitude of a reduction in the rate of reinforcement for the alternative behavior. Groups of both male and female rats initially pressed a target lever for food on a variable-interval (VI) 30-s schedule. In a second phase, responding to the target lever was extinguished for all groups and pressing an alternative lever was reinforced on a VI 10-s schedule. Next, the rate of reinforcement for alternative behavior was reduced differentially across groups by arranging extinction, VI 80-s, VI 40-s, VI 20-s, or continued VI 10-s reinforcement. Target responding increased as an exponential function of the magnitude of the reduction in alternative reinforcement rates. With the exception that males appeared to show higher rates of target responding in baseline and higher rates of alternative responding in other phases, the overall pattern of responding across phases was not meaningfully different between sexes. The pattern of both target and alternative response rates across sessions and phases was well described quantitatively by the Resurgence as Choice in Context model.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. R01 HD093734/NICHD NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Animals
Conditioning, Operant
Extinction, Psychological
Female
Food
Male
Rats
Reinforcement Schedule
Reinforcement, Psychology

Word Cloud

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