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REMOTE EFFECTS OF AVERSIVE CONTINGENCIES: DISRUPTION OF APPETITIVE BEHAVIOR BY ADJACENT AVOIDANCE SESSIONS
Author(s) -
Hackenberg Timothy D.,
Hineline Philip N.
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
journal of the experimental analysis of behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.75
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1938-3711
pISSN - 0022-5002
DOI - 10.1901/jeab.1987.48-161
Subject(s) - reinforcement , psychology , schedule , avoidance response , developmental psychology , avoidance learning , food delivery , postponement , context (archaeology) , differential reinforcement , aversive stimulus , audiology , neuroscience , social psychology , medicine , paleontology , marketing , computer science , business , biology , operating system
Disruption of ongoing appetitive behavior before and after daily avoidance sessions was examined. After baselines of appetitive responding were established under a fixed‐interval 180‐s schedule of food presentation, 4 rats were exposed to 40‐min sessions of the appetitive schedule just prior to 100‐min sessions of electric shock postponement, while another 4 rats received the 40‐min appetitive sessions just following daily sessions of shock postponement. In all 8 subjects, fixed‐interval response rates decreased relative to baseline levels, the effect being somewhat more pronounced when the avoidance sessions immediately followed. The disruption of fixed‐interval responding was only partially reversed when avoidance sessions were discontinued. During the initial exposure to the avoidance sessions, patterns of responding under the fixed‐interval schedule were differentially sensitive to disruption, with high baseline response rates generally more disturbed than low rates. These disruptions were not systematically related to changes in reinforcement frequency, which remained fairly high and invariant across all conditions of the experiment; they were also not systematically related to the response rates or to the shock rates of the adjacent avoidance sessions. The results, while qualitatively resembling patterns of conditioned suppression as typically studied, occurred on a greatly expanded time scale. As disruption of behavior extending over time, the present data suggest that some forms of conditioned suppression are perhaps best viewed within a larger temporal context.

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