Abstract
Prior research on Pavlovian-to-instrumental transfer has shown that when a CS previously associated with shock (AvCS+) is presented contingent upon a choice response to a discriminative stimulus for food reinforcement, it facilitates discrimination learning. Conversely, a response-contingent CS previously associated with the absence of shock (AvCS−) retards discrimination learning. To evaluate whether these findings reflect across-reinforcement blocking and enhancement effects, two experiments investigated the effects of appetitively conditioned stimuli on fear conditioning to a novel stimulus that was serially compounded with the appetitive CS during conditioned-emotional-response (CER) training. Although there were no differential effects of the appetitive CSs in CER acquisition, Experiment 1, using a relatively weak shock US, showed that a CS previously associated with food (ApCS+) retarded CER extinction to the novel stimulus, in evidence of enhanced fear conditioning to that stimulus. In addition, Experiment 2, using a stronger shock US, showed that a CS previously associated with the absence of food (ApCS−) facilitated CER extinction to the novel stimulus, in evidence of weaker fear conditioning to that stimulus. These results parallel traditional blocking effects and indicate not only that an ApCS+ and an ApCS− are functionally similar to AvCSs of opposite sign, but that their functional similarity is mediated by common central emotional states.
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This study was submitted by the first author in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the PhD degree at the University of Pittsburgh. The research was supported in part by U.S. Public Health Service Grant MH-24115 to the second author.
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Goodman, J.H., Fowler, H. Blocking and enhancement of fear conditioning by appetitive CSs. Animal Learning & Behavior 11, 75–82 (1983). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03212311
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03212311