2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2015.02.013
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Super-resurgence: ABA renewal increases resurgence

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Cited by 54 publications
(86 citation statements)
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References 12 publications
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“…3). These findings are consistent with other studies arranging more typical resurgence procedures that have changed the color or presence of stimuli in the transition from Phase 2 to Phase 3 (Kincaid et al, 2015;Podlesnik & Kelley, 2014; but see Sweeney & Shahan, 2015). Overall, these and previous findings suggest that discriminating the initiation of the extinction contingency on the alternative response can influence the size and pattern of resurgence.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…3). These findings are consistent with other studies arranging more typical resurgence procedures that have changed the color or presence of stimuli in the transition from Phase 2 to Phase 3 (Kincaid et al, 2015;Podlesnik & Kelley, 2014; but see Sweeney & Shahan, 2015). Overall, these and previous findings suggest that discriminating the initiation of the extinction contingency on the alternative response can influence the size and pattern of resurgence.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…In addition, we assessed brief stimulus changes to both keylights at the 50-s mark during half of the probe trials. Consistent with previous studies signaling the offset of reinforcement for alternative responding with changes in keylight stimuli (e.g., Kincaid, Lattal, & Spence, 2015;Podlesnik & Kelley, 2014), we predicted these signaled probe trials should increase the discriminability of extinction of alternative responding and, thereby, increase the immediacy and/or size of resurgence.…”
supporting
confidence: 81%
“…Our results may also be compared to recent data of Kincaid, Lattal, and Spence (2015), in which resurgence in three pigeons was greater when the removal of alternative reinforcement was accompanied by a change in the color of the key light relative to when alternative reinforcement was removed and there was no change in the color of the key light. In their study, a type of renewal manipulation (key color change) appeared to increase the magnitude of relapse, whereas in our study, the magnitude of relapse did not depend on whether alternative reinforcement was delivered in another context.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Using a high rate of alternative reinforcement may result in ceiling effects of resurgence because high rates of alternative reinforcement have been associated with greater response suppression during extinction of the alternative response, but relatively greater resurgence following alternative reinforcement removal (Leitenberg et al, 1975; Sweeney &Shahan, 2013a). It could be that the removal of lower rates of alternative reinforcement or those with differential response requirements, such as the DRO 20-s used by Kincaid et al (2015), may result in resurgence that is more sensitive to the effects of a change in stimulus context than was resurgence in the present study. Another possible limitation is the fixed-time criterion of 15 sessions of Phase II may have resulted in our termination of Phase II when alternative response rates were in an upward trend for the Resurgence and Compound Groups.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…The emission of sequences of responses distributed on two keys entails several topographically similar sequences, potentially hindering the resurgence of the target sequence. Therefore, an alternative would be to add differential discriminative stimuli in each experimental phase (see Kincaid, Lattal & Spence, 2015). This idea seems to be plausible, since literature shows evidence of resurgence of key pecking (Doughty, da Silva & Lattal, 2007) and of temporal pattern of responses (Cançado & Lattal, 2011) that were trained in an experimental situation with exteroceptive stimuli.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%