Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference

It is commonly accepted that instrumental responses that have been extinguished can return. For example, in a phenomenon known as the renewal effect, extinguished behaviors return upon removal from the extinction context. Another well-accepted notion is that instrumental behaviors can be thought of...

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Main Author: Steinfeld, Michael
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks @ UVM 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/1041
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2041&context=graddis
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spelling ndltd-uvm.edu-oai-scholarworks.uvm.edu-graddis-20412019-10-20T11:31:09Z Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference Steinfeld, Michael It is commonly accepted that instrumental responses that have been extinguished can return. For example, in a phenomenon known as the renewal effect, extinguished behaviors return upon removal from the extinction context. Another well-accepted notion is that instrumental behaviors can be thought of as goal-directed actions, which form over the course of moderate amounts of practice or training, and habits, which form after extended practice. Despite years of research on both topics, what happens to actions and habits following extinction is poorly understood. The present experiments examined the renewal of actions and habits following retroactive interference paradigms such as extinction and additional training. Experiment 1 examined renewal of an action following its extinction in a separate context, and demonstrated that the extinguished behavior renewed as an action upon return to the acquisition context. Experiment 2 asked the same question about habits, and found that the behavior renewed as a habit after extinction upon return to the acquisition context. Experiment 3 examined renewal of goal-directed responding in one context following extensive training and conversion into habit in another context. It demonstrated that a single response could manifest as a habit in one context, and renew as an action in the original training context. Experiment 4 asked if this effect depends on returning to the acquisition context, or simply removal from the habit training context. The results suggest that mere removal from the habit training context is sufficient to renew the goal-directed properties of a behavior. Together, the results suggest that actions and habits can be inhibited in a context-specific manner by extinction, and that instrumental behaviors can have both action and habit properties that can each renew under the proper circumstances. The results also expand on the notion that habits are especially context specific, while actions can transfer across contexts. 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/1041 https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2041&context=graddis Graduate College Dissertations and Theses en ScholarWorks @ UVM Actions Context Extinction Habits Renewal Psychology
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Actions
Context
Extinction
Habits
Renewal
Psychology
spellingShingle Actions
Context
Extinction
Habits
Renewal
Psychology
Steinfeld, Michael
Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference
description It is commonly accepted that instrumental responses that have been extinguished can return. For example, in a phenomenon known as the renewal effect, extinguished behaviors return upon removal from the extinction context. Another well-accepted notion is that instrumental behaviors can be thought of as goal-directed actions, which form over the course of moderate amounts of practice or training, and habits, which form after extended practice. Despite years of research on both topics, what happens to actions and habits following extinction is poorly understood. The present experiments examined the renewal of actions and habits following retroactive interference paradigms such as extinction and additional training. Experiment 1 examined renewal of an action following its extinction in a separate context, and demonstrated that the extinguished behavior renewed as an action upon return to the acquisition context. Experiment 2 asked the same question about habits, and found that the behavior renewed as a habit after extinction upon return to the acquisition context. Experiment 3 examined renewal of goal-directed responding in one context following extensive training and conversion into habit in another context. It demonstrated that a single response could manifest as a habit in one context, and renew as an action in the original training context. Experiment 4 asked if this effect depends on returning to the acquisition context, or simply removal from the habit training context. The results suggest that mere removal from the habit training context is sufficient to renew the goal-directed properties of a behavior. Together, the results suggest that actions and habits can be inhibited in a context-specific manner by extinction, and that instrumental behaviors can have both action and habit properties that can each renew under the proper circumstances. The results also expand on the notion that habits are especially context specific, while actions can transfer across contexts.
author Steinfeld, Michael
author_facet Steinfeld, Michael
author_sort Steinfeld, Michael
title Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference
title_short Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference
title_full Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference
title_fullStr Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference
title_full_unstemmed Contextual Control Of Instrumental Actions And Habits Following Retroactive Interference
title_sort contextual control of instrumental actions and habits following retroactive interference
publisher ScholarWorks @ UVM
publishDate 2019
url https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/1041
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2041&context=graddis
work_keys_str_mv AT steinfeldmichael contextualcontrolofinstrumentalactionsandhabitsfollowingretroactiveinterference
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