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Erschienen in: Learning & Behavior 1/2012

01.03.2012

Spontaneous recovery and ABC renewal from retroactive cue interference

verfasst von: Gonzalo Miguez, Henry X. Cham, Ralph R. Miller

Erschienen in: Learning & Behavior | Ausgabe 1/2012

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Abstract

Two conditioned suppression experiments with rats were conducted to determine whether the spontaneous recovery and renewal that are commonly observed in retroactive outcome interference (e.g., extinction) also occur in retroactive cue interference. Experiment 1 showed that a long delay between Phase 2 (the interfering phase) and testing produces a recovery from the cue interference (i.e., the delay enhanced responding to the target cue trained in Phase 1), which is analogous to the spontaneous recovery effect observed in extinction and other retroactive outcome interference procedures. Experiment 2 showed that, when target and interfering cues are trained in separate contexts and testing occurs in a different but familiar context, a recovery from the cue interference is also observed (i.e., the context shift enhanced responding to the target), which is analogous to ABC renewal from extinction. The results are discussed in terms of the possibility that similar associative mechanisms underlie cue and outcome interference.

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Metadaten
Titel
Spontaneous recovery and ABC renewal from retroactive cue interference
verfasst von
Gonzalo Miguez
Henry X. Cham
Ralph R. Miller
Publikationsdatum
01.03.2012
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Learning & Behavior / Ausgabe 1/2012
Print ISSN: 1543-4494
Elektronische ISSN: 1543-4508
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3758/s13420-011-0044-4

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