Abstract
Rats were trained to run up and down an alleyway for sucrose reinforcement on a variable interval schedule. Differential aversive classical conditioning with auditory CSs was then conducted in a separate apparatus ("off the baseline") prior to those CSs being presented while the subjects were responding for sucrose in the alleyway. Once the effects of the CSs had extinguished, shock was reintroduced following one CS but not the other ("on the baseline" differential aversive classical conditioning). Both "off the baseline" and "on the baseline" conditioning resulted in conditioned suppression to the CS followed by shock, but little effect of the CS followed by no shock was found. In the "on the baseline" phase, total suppression of baseline responding occurred at moderate US intensities, and this appeared to result from the subject avoiding the location at which he was last shocked. At lower values, both baseline response rate and relative suppression ratio were functions of US intensity. The results are discussed in relation to the effects found in similar experiments using avoidance baselines. © 1976 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Leslie, J. C., & Garrud, P. (1976). Conditioned suppression of a positively reinforced shuttle response. Animal Learning & Behavior, 4(1), 99–104. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03211995
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