Department of Psychology, Program in Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA.
Psychon Bull Rev. 2018 Oct;25(5):1943-1951. doi: 10.3758/s13423-017-1402-9.
The typical practice of averaging group performance during extinction gives the impression that responding declines gradually and homogeneously. However, previous studies of extinction in human infants have shown that some individuals persist in responding, whereas others abruptly cease responding. As predicted by theories of control, the infants who quickly resign typically display signs of sadness and despair when the expected reward is omitted. Using genetically diverse mice, here we observed a similar pattern of individual differences and the associated phenotypes. After learning to approach a food reward, upon extinction, some animals rapidly abandoned approach to the goal box, whereas other animals persisted in entering and searching the goal box. Interestingly, the persistent mice were slower to "give up" when confined to an inescapable pool of water (a test asserted to be indicative of susceptibility to depression) and exhibited a more extensive pattern of search for omitted rewards. Thus, extinction reveals a continuum in persistence, in which low values might reflect a susceptibility to the negative effects of stress and might predispose individuals to depression.
在消退过程中平均群体表现的典型做法给人一种反应逐渐且均匀下降的印象。然而,先前对人类婴儿消退的研究表明,一些个体持续反应,而另一些个体则突然停止反应。正如控制理论所预测的那样,当预期的奖励被省略时,那些迅速放弃的婴儿通常会表现出悲伤和绝望的迹象。使用遗传多样性的老鼠,我们在这里观察到了类似的个体差异模式和相关表型。在学会接近食物奖励后,在消退过程中,一些动物迅速放弃接近目标箱,而其他动物则继续进入并搜索目标箱。有趣的是,当被限制在不可逃脱的水池中时,持续探索的老鼠“放弃”的速度较慢(该测试被认为是对抑郁易感性的一种测试),并且表现出更广泛的搜索缺失奖励的模式。因此,消退揭示了一种持续的连续体,其中低值可能反映了对压力负面影响的易感性,并且可能使个体易患抑郁症。