Term ID: T1369

Extinction Learning

/extinction-learning/
The process by which conditioned responses diminish when conditioned stimuli are repeatedly presented without unconditioned stimuli, involving new learning that inhibits rather than erases original fear memories. This distinction has important implications for relapse prevention.
Example: Learning that a previously feared dog is safe doesn't erase the original fear memory but creates a new "safety" memory that competes with the fear memory.

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Reference: Bouton (2002)