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Related Concept Videos

Punishment01:27

Punishment

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Negative reinforcement and punishment are often confused but serve distinct functions in behavior modification. Reinforcement, whether positive or negative, increases the likelihood of a desired behavior, while punishment decreases it.
Punishment can be positive or negative. Positive punishment involves adding an undesirable stimulus, such as scolding, to decrease a behavior. Negative punishment involves removing a desirable stimulus, such as taking away a favorite toy, to decrease behavior....
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In operant conditioning, the timing of reinforcement is crucial. For animals like rats and cats, immediate reinforcement (within a few seconds) is much more effective than delayed reinforcement. For example, a food reward for a rat needs to follow within 30 seconds of pressing a bar to be effective. 
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Positive and negative reinforcement are key concepts in operant conditioning, a learning process where the consequences of a behavior affect the likelihood of that behavior being repeated.
Positive reinforcement occurs when a behavior is followed by the presentation of a rewarding stimulus, increasing the frequency of that behavior. For example:
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 24, 2025

A Procedure to Study Stress-Induced Relapse of Heroin Seeking after Punishment-Imposed Abstinence
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Punishment-induced resurgence.

Ryan Redner1, Kathryn M Kestner2, Amin Lotfizadeh3

  • 1School of Psychological and Behavioral Sciences, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, USA.

Behavioural Processes
|June 4, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Punishment-induced resurgence, where a previously suppressed behavior returns after punishment, was observed in rats even when punishment did not decrease reinforcement rates. This study provides evidence for punishment-induced resurgence.

Keywords:
Behavioral historyPunishmentRatsResponse recoveryResurgence

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Area of Science:

  • Behavioral psychology
  • Animal behavior research

Background:

  • Extinction-induced resurgence is a known phenomenon.
  • Experimental evidence for punishment-induced resurgence is limited.
  • Punishment-induced resurgence can be tested by applying shocks after an alternative response.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if low-intensity shocks, not affecting reinforcement rates, cause resurgence.
  • To evaluate if abrupt high-intensity shocks induce resurgence.
  • To provide further evidence for punishment-induced resurgence.

Main Methods:

  • Two experiments were conducted with rats.
  • Rats were exposed to conditions involving lever pressing, nose poking for reinforcement, and extinction.
  • Punishment was introduced via contingent shocks of varying intensities and abruptness.

Main Results:

  • Resurgence was observed in all subjects across both experiments.
  • Punishment-induced resurgence occurred even when shock did not decrease the rate of reinforcement.
  • Behavioral resurgence was noted in situations where only the rate of responding decreased, not reinforcement rate.

Conclusions:

  • The study provides additional evidence supporting the phenomenon of punishment-induced resurgence.
  • Future research is needed to explore the conditions under which punishment elicits resurgence.
  • The role of decreased reinforcement rates in punishment-induced resurgence requires further investigation.