Research project:Â Context and learning
Learning involves a process of continual adjustment to changing environmental conditions but ‘old’ learning is not always lost. For example, if a response to one stimulus is first learned and then extinguished (i.e. trained so that the stimulus no longer elicits the response) it is frequently possible for the original response to reappear. This phenomenon, known as ‘response-recovery’, depends crucially on context, and is thought to be involved in clinical problems (e.g. addiction) when target behaviours are acquired in one setting but lost in another so that relapse occurs.