Associative Learning and Conditioning Theory 2011
DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199735969.003.0025
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Behavioral Techniques to Reduce Relapse After Exposure Therapy

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Cited by 41 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…While rodent studies, human fear conditioning studies, and a few human appetitive conditioning studies have identified an array of potentially effective techniques (Bouton, 2002;Craske, Treanor, Conway, Zbozinek, & Vervliet, 2014;Laborda, McConnell, & Miller, 2011;MacKillop & Lisman, 2008;Van Gucht, Baeyens, Hermans, & Beckers, 2013;Van Gucht, Baeyens, Vansteenwegen, Hermans, & Beckers, 2010), no studies have examined ways of tackling rapid reacquisition of appetitive responses in humans. In rats, one procedure that has been shown to be very effective in slowing down the reacquisition of appetitive responses after extinction is the presentation of some CSeUS pairings during extinction (Bouton, Woods, & Pineño, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While rodent studies, human fear conditioning studies, and a few human appetitive conditioning studies have identified an array of potentially effective techniques (Bouton, 2002;Craske, Treanor, Conway, Zbozinek, & Vervliet, 2014;Laborda, McConnell, & Miller, 2011;MacKillop & Lisman, 2008;Van Gucht, Baeyens, Hermans, & Beckers, 2013;Van Gucht, Baeyens, Vansteenwegen, Hermans, & Beckers, 2010), no studies have examined ways of tackling rapid reacquisition of appetitive responses in humans. In rats, one procedure that has been shown to be very effective in slowing down the reacquisition of appetitive responses after extinction is the presentation of some CSeUS pairings during extinction (Bouton, Woods, & Pineño, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Preventing or diminishing the strength of returns of appetitive responses can potentially help improve the long-term successfulness of dieting efforts and treatments. However, while learning theorists have proposed a number of techniques that may counteract returns of appetitive responses (Boutelle & Bouton, 2015; Mark E. Bouton, 2011;Craske, Treanor, Conway, Zbozinek, & Vervliet, 2014;Havermans & Jansen, 2003;Jansen, Schyns, Bongers, & van den Akker, 2016;Laborda, McConnell, & Miller, 2011), their effectiveness in humans remains largely untested.…”
Section: Extinctionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While rodent studies, human fear conditioning studies, and a few human appetitive conditioning studies have identified an array of potentially effective techniques (Bouton, 2002;Craske, Treanor, Conway, Zbozinek, & Vervliet, 2014;Laborda, McConnell, & Miller, 2011;MacKillop & Lisman, 2008;Van Gucht, Baeyens, Hermans, & Beckers, 2013;Van Gucht, Baeyens, Vansteenwegen, Hermans, & Beckers, 2010), no studies have examined ways of tackling rapid reacquisition of appetitive responses in humans. In rats, one procedure that has been shown to be very effective in slowing down the reacquisition of appetitive responses after extinction is the presentation of some CS-US pairings during extinction (Bouton, Woods, & Pineño, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In search of producing extinction free of recovery, recent research concerning experimental extinction has identified some behavioral techniques to attenuate the recovery of extinguished conditioned responses (see Laborda, McConnell & Miller, 2011;. If experimental extinction models exposure therapy, and renewal and other recovery-from-extinction situations model relapse after exposure therapy, then the techniques that reduce recovery from extinction could also be used to model a reduction in relapse.…”
Section: Relapse Preventionmentioning
confidence: 99%