Elsevier

Learning and Motivation

Volume 10, Issue 4, November 1979, Pages 445-466
Learning and Motivation

Contextual control of the extinction of conditioned fear

https://doi.org/10.1016/0023-9690(79)90057-2Get rights and content

Abstract

Rats received 15 pairings of a CS and shock in one context, and then a series of CS-alone trials in a second context. Even though this extinction procedure produced a complete loss of conditioned suppression, when the animals were returned to the site of original conditioning, suppression was renewed to a level comparable to that of animals that had not undergone extinction. Controls indicated that the renewed suppression was not due solely to pseudoconditioning, suggesting that the CS-US association had survived extinction. Renewed suppression was also demonstrated in a third context that was never associated with shock. Loss of suppression did not necessarily depend upon inhibitory conditioning of the extinction context. The data suggest that extinction of conditioned fear is specific to the context in which it occurs. They also suggest the possibility that animals might discriminate episodes in which a CS is reinforced and nonreinforced independently of the excitatory or inhibitory status of cues, like contextual stimuli, that are coincidentally present during those episodes.

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  • Cited by (0)

    This research was supported by National Science Foundation Grant BNS 76-19912. Portions of the data were reported at the November 1977 meeting of the Psychonomic Society in Washington, D.C.

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