Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2426673 Behavioural Processes 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Previous uncontrollable shocks do not interfere with the learning involving positive reinforcement.•Previous incontrollable shocks do not interfere with the learning of disciminative behavior controled by exteroceptive stimulus.•Rats presenting the escape learning interference produced by uncontrollable shocks (learned helplessnes effect) can learn normally a positively reinforced response.•The exposition to positive reinforcement do not reverts the learned helplessness effect.

In this study, we investigated whether (a) animals demonstrating the learned helplessness effect during an escape contingency also show learning deficits under positive reinforcement contingencies involving stimulus control and (b) the exposure to positive reinforcement contingencies eliminates the learned helplessness effect under an escape contingency. Rats were initially exposed to controllable (C), uncontrollable (U) or no (N) shocks. After 24 h, they were exposed to 60 escapable shocks delivered in a shuttlebox. In the following phase, we selected from each group the four subjects that presented the most typical group pattern: no escape learning (learned helplessness effect) in Group U and escape learning in Groups C and N. All subjects were then exposed to two phases, the (1) positive reinforcement for lever pressing under a multiple FR/Extinction schedule and (2) a re-test under negative reinforcement (escape). A fourth group (n = 4) was exposed only to the positive reinforcement sessions. All subjects showed discrimination learning under multiple schedule. In the escape re-test, the learned helplessness effect was maintained for three of the animals in Group U. These results suggest that the learned helplessness effect did not extend to discriminative behavior that is positively reinforced and that the learned helplessness effect did not revert for most subjects after exposure to positive reinforcement. We discuss some theoretical implications as related to learned helplessness as an effect restricted to aversive contingencies and to the absence of reversion after positive reinforcement.This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: insert SI title.

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