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Among the tactics of experimental science discussed by Sidman (1960) were those used to study transitional behavior. Drawing from his insights, this review considers an often cited but infrequently analyzed aspect of the transition from reinforcement to extinction: the extinction burst. In particular, the review seeks to answer the question posed in its title. The generic definition of an extinction burst as an increase in response rate following the onset of extinction is found to be wanting, raising more questions than it answers. Because questions of definition in science usually come down to those of measurement, the answer to the title's question is suggested to be found in how behavior prior to extinction is maintained and measured, when and how extinction is introduced, and where in time and how behavior early in extinction is measured. This analysis suggests that a single, uniform, and precise definition of the extinction burst is misguided. Examining how each of these facets contributes to what has been described generically as the extinction burst is a small, but important, part of Sidman's methodological legacy to the experimental analysis of behavior.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jeab.642 | DOI Listing |
J Exp Anal Behav
September 2025
Utah State University, Logan, UT, USA.
Discontinuing reinforcement for an operant behavior sometimes produces a transient increase in responding (i.e., an extinction burst).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
August 2025
Department of Biology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
Lemurs are often cited as an example of adaptive radiation, as more than 100 extant species have evolved and filled ecological niches on Madagascar. However, recent work suggests that lemurs lack a hallmark of other adaptive radiations: explosive speciation rates that decline over time. Thus, characterizing the tempo and mode of evolution in lemurs can reveal alternative ways that hyperdiverse clades arise over time, which might differ from traditional models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
November 2025
Botanic Institute of Barcelona (IBB, CSIC-Ajuntament de Barcelona), Pg. del Migdia, s.n., 08038 Barcelona, Spain.
The Tibet-Himalaya-Hengduan region (THH) harbours the world's richest temperate alpine flora. To investigate the main evolutionary and ecological processes underlying this outstanding biodiversity, we tested multiple hypotheses focusing in Saussurea (Compositae), a representative genus of ca. 450 species that extensively diversified in THH and adjacent regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatl Sci Rev
July 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117543, Singapore.
Macroevolutionary forces, such as rare catastrophes, have repeatedly disrupted and reset the evolutionary trajectories of Earth's major organismal groups. The Cretaceous-Paleogene (K/Pg) extinction event, approximately 66 Ma, resulted in the demise of ∼75% of all species at the time, yet despite its magnitude, many major organismal lineages successfully passed through this mass extinction. The evolutionary origins of modern birds (crown-group Aves) remain a subject of substantial debate, as they are often thought to have undergone their primary diversification following the K/Pg boundary.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
May 2025
HUN-REN Centre for Energy Research, Institute of Technical Physics and Materials Science, Konkoly-Thege M. út 29-33, H-1121 Budapest, Hungary.
The donation game is an instance of a social dilemma with a single parameter given by the cost-to-benefit ratio of cooperation, r. In spatial settings, limited local interactions and clustering are capable of supporting cooperation by reducing exploitation from defectors. Traditionally, the interaction and competition neighborhoods are identical.
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