Bachá-Méndez, G., Reid, A.K., & Mendoza-Soylovna, A. (2007).
Resurgence of integrated behavioral units.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 87, 5-24.
Two experiments with rats examined the dynamics of well-learned response sequences when reinforcement
sequence of lever presses until responding was stable. The contingencies then were shifted to a new reinforced
sequence until responding was again stable. Extinction-induced resurgence of previously reinforced, and then
extinguished, heterogeneous response sequences was observed in all subjects in both experiments. These sequences
were demonstrated to be integrated behavioral units, controlled by processes acting at the level of the entire
sequence. Response-level processes were also simultaneously operative. Errors in sequence production were strongly
influenced by the terminal, not the initial, response in the currently reinforced sequence, but not by the
previously reinforced sequence. These studies demonstrate that sequence-level and response-level processes can
operate simultaneously in integrated behavioral units. Resurgence and the development of integrated behavioral
units may be dissociated; thus the observation of one does not necessarily imply the other.
Key words: behavioral unit; extinction; functional response unit; response sequence; resurgence; sequence
learning; lever press; rats