Behavioral and neurobiological mechanisms of pavlovian and instrumental extinction learning

Author:

Bouton Mark E.1ORCID,Maren Stephen2,McNally Gavan P.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological Science, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont

2. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and Institute for Neuroscience, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

3. School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

This article reviews the behavioral neuroscience of extinction, the phenomenon in which a behavior that has been acquired through Pavlovian or instrumental (operant) learning decreases in strength when the outcome that reinforced it is removed. Behavioral research indicates that neither Pavlovian nor operant extinction depends substantially on erasure of the original learning but instead depends on new inhibitory learning that is primarily expressed in the context in which it is learned, as exemplified by the renewal effect. Although the nature of the inhibition may differ in Pavlovian and operant extinction, in either case the decline in responding may depend on both generalization decrement and the correction of prediction error. At the neural level, Pavlovian extinction requires a tripartite neural circuit involving the amygdala, prefrontal cortex, and hippocampus. Synaptic plasticity in the amygdala is essential for extinction learning, and prefrontal cortical inhibition of amygdala neurons encoding fear memories is involved in extinction retrieval. Hippocampal-prefrontal circuits mediate fear relapse phenomena, including renewal. Instrumental extinction involves distinct ensembles in corticostriatal, striatopallidal, and striatohypothalamic circuits as well as their thalamic returns for inhibitory (extinction) and excitatory (renewal and other relapse phenomena) control over operant responding. The field has made significant progress in recent decades, although a fully integrated biobehavioral understanding still awaits.

Funder

Department of Health, Australian Government | National Health and Medical Research Council

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders, Australian Research Council

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Molecular Biology,Physiology,General Medicine

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