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Artículo

Spontaneous recovery from extinction in the infant rat

Revillo, Damian AlejandroIcon ; Paglini, Maria GabrielaIcon ; Arias Grandio, CarlosIcon
Fecha de publicación: 11/2014
Editorial: Elsevier Science
Revista: Behavioural Brain Research
ISSN: 0166-4328
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de recurso: Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Psicología

Resumen

Within the Pavlovian conditioning framework, extinction is a procedure in which, after conditioning, the conditioned stimulus (CS) is repeatedly presented without the unconditioned stimulus (US). During this procedure the conditioned response (CR) is gradually attenuated. It has been suggested that extinction during the early stages of ontogeny is a qualitatively different process from extinction in adulthood: during infancy, extinction may result in erasure of the memory, while during adulthood extinction involves new learning. This conclusion was supported by studies showing that renewal, reinstatement or spontaneous recovery procedures were not effective during infancy for recovering the CR once it had been extinguished. These studies used the freezing response as the only behavioral index, although some recent evidence indicates that the absence of freezing after conditioning or after extinction does not necessarily imply a deficit in memory, and that other behavioral indexes may be more sensitive to detecting conditioning effects. The goal of the present study was to analyze extinction in preweanling rats by examining the possibility of the spontaneous recovery of a conditioned fear response, measured through a different set of mutually-exclusive behaviors that constitute an exhaustive ethogram, and including control groups (Experiment 1: US-Only and CS-Only; Experiment 2: US-Only, CS-Only and Unpaired) in order to examine whether non-associative learning may explain quantitative or qualitative changes in the frequency of specific responses during extinction or recovery. Extinction produced changes in the expression of freezing, grooming and exploration, and the clearest evidence of spontaneous recovery came from the analysis of freezing behavior. The pattern of behavior observed during extinction is compatible with theoretical approaches which consider different dynamic behavioral systems, and it also fit in well with a molar approach to the analysis of behavior, which considers that extinction involves a transition from one allocation of time among behaviors to another allocation, rather than a loss of strength in any particular discrete response. These results have implications for the study of extinction during infancy, since they are compatible with the hypothesis that the original memory survives extinction, and highlight the importance of control conditions for detecting this effect during this ontogenetic period.
Palabras clave: Conditioning , Extinction , Spontaneous Recovery , Development , Freezing , Ethogram , Rat
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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Excepto donde se diga explícitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11336/31629
URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016643281400521
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbr.2014.08.009
Colecciones
Articulos(INIMEC - CONICET)
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE INV. MEDICAS MERCEDES Y MARTIN FERREYRA
Citación
Arias Grandio, Carlos; Paglini, Maria Gabriela; Revillo, Damian Alejandro; Spontaneous recovery from extinction in the infant rat; Elsevier Science; Behavioural Brain Research; 274; 11-2014; 149-157
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