Emergence of complex dynamics of choice due to repeated exposures to extinction learning

Author:

Donoso José R.,Packheiser Julian,Pusch Roland,Lederer Zhiyin,Walther Thomas,Uengoer Metin,Lachnit Harald,Güntürkün Onur,Cheng SenORCID

Abstract

AbstractExtinction learning, the process of ceasing an acquired behavior in response to altered reinforcement contingencies, is not only essential for survival in a changing environment, but also plays a fundamental role in the treatment of pathological behaviors. During therapy and other forms of training involving extinction, subjects are typically exposed to several sessions with a similar structure. The effects of this repeated exposure are not well understood. Here, we studied the behavior of pigeons across several sessions of a discrimination-learning task in context A, extinction in context B, and a return to context A to test the context-dependent return of the learned responses (ABA renewal). By focusing on individual learning curves across animals, we uncovered a session-dependent variability of behavior: (1) during extinction, pigeons preferred the unrewarded alternative choice in one-third of the sessions, predominantly during the first one. (2) In later sessions, abrupt transitions of behavior at the onset of context B emerged, and (3) the renewal effect decayed as sessions progressed. We show that the observed results can be parsimoniously accounted for by a computational model based only on associative learning between stimuli and actions. Our work thus demonstrates the critical importance of studying the trial-by-trial dynamics of learning in individual sessions, and the power of “simple” associative learning processes.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Ruhr-Universität Bochum

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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