EFFECTS OF SIGNALS PRECEDING AND FOLLOWING SHOCK ON BASELINE RESPONDING DURING A CONDITIONED‐SUPPRESSION PROCEDURE1
- 1 March 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior
- Vol. 25 (2) , 263-277
- https://doi.org/10.1901/jeab.1976.25-263
Abstract
Long-Evans rats were exposed to a succession of conditioned-suppression procedures involving pairings of (1) signal-shock, (2) shock-signal, and (3) a signal-shock-signal sequence in which first and second signals were at first physically identical. Traditional suppression of food-reinforced responding was obtained under the signal-shock arrangement, and exposure to the shock-signal sequence resulted in conditioned enhancement of responding during the signal. The signal-shock-signal condition reliably suppressed responding during the first signal, but produced no differential effect on response rate during the second signal. Baseline responding was least changed from preshock rates under the signal-shock-signal procedure, but baseline rate was considerably reduced under the signal-shock and shock-signal arrangements, the latter yielding most substantial reductions. a second experiment indicated that the magnitude and direction of changes in baseline responding reported in Experiment I were not confined to cases in which the first and second signals in the signal-shock-signal arrangement were physically identical. It is suggested that the major effects of the conditioned-suppression procedure on response rate might not be confined to presentations of the signal.Keywords
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