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Studies of instrumental responding often include the delivery of a cue that is coincident with the delivery of the reinforcer. One purpose of this is for the cue to be removed during extinction and then presented later to assess whether responding returns (cue-induced reinstatement). In two experiments, we examined the effects of having a cue associated with reinforcement present or absent during extinction. In Experiment 1, the cue was associated with fixed ratio responding for intravenous cocaine or food pellets in one context (Context A), followed by extinction in another context (Context B), where responding produced the cue in one group but did not produce the cue in the other group. Afterward, contextual renewal was assessed with and without the cue in Context A. During extinction, a cue previously associated with cocaine reinforcement caused an increase in responding initially (an extinction burst) and throughout 16 2-hr extinction sessions, as well as weakened contextual renewal when animals were tested with the cue in Context A. In contrast, there were few detectable effects of the cue on extinction and contextual renewal when food pellets were the reinforcer. In Experiment 2, effects of a cue during extinction of progressive ratio responding were revealed with food pellets when animals showed weakened responding on the initial trials of postextinction reacquisition sessions. These experiments demonstrate that the presence of a cue associated with reinforcement during extinction may prolong responding in the short term while creating a more persistent form of extinction that resists relapse. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/bne0000519 | DOI Listing |
Drug Alcohol Depend
August 2025
Center for Substance Abuse Research and Department of Neural Sciences, Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University, 3500 N. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19140, USA. Electronic address:
Background: The use of methamphetamine has continued to rise in the US. In addition to facilitating dopamine neurotransmission, methamphetamine indirectly increases glutamate release, which activates N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs). Ketamine is a noncompetitive NMDAR antagonist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Learn Mem
September 2025
UNSW Sydney, Australia; University of Technology Sydney, Australia. Electronic address:
Pavlovian stimuli signalling potential punishment and reward have powerful effects on instrumental behaviours. For example, a cue associated with punishment will suppress well-learned instrumental responses. However, the degree to which Pavlovian stimuli interfere with the learning of instrumental responses is less well studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Psychobiol
September 2025
School of Psychology, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Adolescent male rodents and humans exhibit impairments in extinguishing learned fear. Here, we investigated whether female adolescent rats exhibit such impairments and if extinction is affected by the estrous cycle as in adults. Following fear conditioning to a discrete cue, female adolescent Sprague Dawley rats were extinguished either around the onset of puberty, when estrous cycling begins, or across different stages of the estrous cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosci Res
September 2025
Institute for the Advanced Study of Human Biology, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Kyoto prefecture, Japan. Electronic address:
Decision-making often involves evaluating trade-offs between potential rewards and aversive outcomes, engaging both motivational drive and affective judgment. The ventral striatum (VS) and ventral pallidum (VP) are key regions in these processes. While the VS is associated with reward processing and incentive motivation, the VP encodes hedonic value and mediates motivated behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
September 2025
Center for Mind and Brain, University of California, Davis, Davis, United States.
Visual search relies on the ability to use information about the target in working memory to guide attention and make target-match decisions. The 'attentional' or 'target' template is thought to be encoded within an inferior frontal junction (IFJ)-visual attentional network. While this template typically contains veridical target features, behavioral studies have shown that target-associated information, such as statistically co-occurring object pairs, can also guide attention.
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