48 results on '"Westbrook R"'
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2. Protecting the Rescorla–Wagner (1972) theory: A reply to Spicer et al. (2020).
3. An application of Wagner’s Standard Operating Procedures or Sometimes Opponent Processes (SOP) model to experimental extinction.
4. A combination of common and individual error terms is not needed to explain associative changes when cues with different training histories are conditioned in compound: A review of Rescorla’s compound test procedure.
5. Dietary effects on object recognition: The impact of high-fat high-sugar diets on recollection and familiarity-based memory.
6. An examination of changes in behavioral control when stimuli with different associative histories are conditioned in compound.
7. Incentive contrast effects regulate responding to a flavor presented in compound with a saccharin unconditioned stimulus in rats.
8. Context dependency of conditioned aversions to water and sweet tastes
9. Emotion perception after moderate–severe traumatic brain injury: The valence effect and the role of working memory, processing speed, and nonverbal reasoning.
10. ABA renewal is greater when extinction occurs in the same context as cue pre-exposure.
11. Extinguished second-order conditioned fear responses are renewed but not reinstated.
12. Extinction of reinstated or ABC renewed fear responses renders them resistant to subsequent ABA renewal.
13. A further assessment of the Hall–Rodriguez theory of latent inhibition.
14. Two ways to deepen extinction and the difference between them.
15. Additional exposures to a compound of two preexposed stimuli deepen latent inhibition.
16. Additional exposures reverse the latent inhibitory effects of recent and remote exposures.
17. Increased spontaneous recovery with increases in conditioned stimulus alone exposures.
18. Renewal and spontaneous recovery, but not latent inhibition, are mediated by gamma-aminobutyric acid in appetitive conditioning.
19. Negative patterning is easier than a biconditional discrimination.
20. Extinction and latent inhibition of within-event learning are context specific.
21. Changes in cue associability across training in human causal learning.
22. How the associative strengths of stimuli combine in compound: Summation and overshadowing.
23. Massed extinction trials produce better short-term but worse long-term loss of context conditioned fear responses than spaced trials.
24. Spontaneous recovery of extinguished fear responses deepens their extinction: A role for error-correction mechanisms.
25. Rapid reacquisition of fear to a completely extinguished context is replaced by transient impairment with additional extinction training.
26. A short intertrial interval facilitates acquisition of context-conditioned fear and a short retention interval facilitates its expression.
27. Reinstatement of extinguished fear by β-adrenergic arousal elicited by a conditioned context.
28. Increased Vulnerability to Stress Following Opiate Exposures: Behavioral and Autonomic Correlates.
29. Recent Exposure to a Dangerous Context Impairs Extinction and Reinstates Lost Fear Reactions.
30. Persistence of Preference for a Flavor Presented in Simultaneous Compound With Sucrose.
31. Temporally graded, context-specific retrograde amnesia and its alleviation by context preexposure: Effects of postconditioning exposures to morphine in the rat.
32. Opioid Receptors Regulate the Extinction of Pavlovian Fear Conditioning.
33. Anterograde amnesia for Pavlovian fear conditioning and the role of one trial overshadowing: Effects of preconditioning exposures to morphine in rat.
34. Reinstatement of fear to an extinguished conditioned stimulus: Two roles for context.
35. Contextual control over conditioned responding in an extinction paradigm.
36. Motivational state regulates the content of learned flavor preferences.
37. Contextual control over conditioned responding in a latent inhibition paradigm.
38. A peripheral, intracerebral, or intrathecal administration of an opioid receptor antagonist blocks illness-induced hyperalgesia in the rat.
39. The benzodiazepine midazolam does not impair Pavlovian fear conditioning but regulates when and where fear is expressed.
40. An infusion of bupivacaine into the nucleus accumbens disrupts the acquisition but not the expression of contextual fear conditioning.
41. Effects of systemic, intracerebral, or intrathecal administration on an N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist on associative morphine analgesic tolerance and hyperalgesia in rats.
42. Benzodiazepine-induced amnesia in rats: Reinstatement of conditioned performance by noxious stimulation on test.
43. Microinjection of morphine into the nucleus accumbens impairs contextual learning in rats.
44. Effects of a microinjection of morphine into the amygdala on the acquisition and expression of conditioned fear and hypoalgesia in rats.
45. Effects of benzodiazepine microinjection into the amygdala or periaqueductal gray on the expression of conditioned fear and hypoalgesia in rats.
46. Fos expression in the spinal cord is suppressed in rats displaying conditioned hypoalgesia.
47. Aversive conditioning in the rat: Effects of a benzodiazepine and of an opioid agonist and antagonist on conditioned hypoalgesia and fear.
48. Short- and long-term decrements in toxicosis-induced odor-aversion learning: The role of duration of exposure to an odor.
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