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Effect of effort and latent extinction on resistance to extinction
Authors:Wayne Viney   Neil Johnson  Larry Jacobson
Affiliation: a Department of Psychology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S.A.b U.S. Army Human Engineering Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Aberdeen, Maryland, U.S.A.
Abstract:Sixty-four male Wistar rats were given acquisition training in an enclosed straight-alley runway which could be adjusted for angles of inclination. The 2×2×2 design involved two angles of inclination in acquisition (0° and 40°) and two angles of inclination in extinction (0° and 40°). Between acquisition and extinction, half the subjects were exposed to a latent extinction procedure and half served as controls. Number of responses in a 30-min extinction session was an inverse function of effort required in extinction. Additionally, latent extinction procedures resulted in reduced resistance to extinction, but only when the effort conditions of acquisition and extinction were constant. When the effort conditions of acquisition and extinction were dissimilar, latent extinction procedures resulted in increased resistance to extinction. The results raise questions about the nature of the learning which occurs during latent extinction training.
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