The mechanisms of extinction were examined by reducing the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus (US) after acquisition training to determine whether such reductions lie on a continuum with CS-alone extinction. The experiments revealed that reductions in US intensity yielded extinction-like effects. Specifically, there were proportional reductions in the daily mean level of responding across sessions. There were also persistent within-session declines and between-session increases of responding analogous to spontaneous recovery. Surprisingly, even when US intensity was held constant, within-session declines and between-session increases were apparent. The results are discussed with respect to possible contributions from unlearning, new learning, generalization decrement, and nonassociative loss, especially CS-specific attentional changes and CR-specific reactive inhibition.
EXTINCTION AND US INTENSITY 97the conditioned response (CR) with a 4-mA shock US, each of four groups was presented with a lower US intensity. In addition to CS-alone extinction (no US), three reduced US intensities were used: 0.5, 1, and 2 mA. The latter two values are known to produce reliable CR acquisition in the rabbit nictitating membrane (NM) preparation (Napier, Macrae, & Kehoe, 1992;Smith, 1968).
Method