In the
operant conditioning paradigm, extinction refers to the process of no longer providing the reinforcement that has been maintaining a behavior.
Operant extinction differs from forgetting in that the latter refers to a decrease in the strength of a behavior over time when it has not been emitted. For example, a child who climbs under his desk, a response which has been reinforced by
attention, is subsequently ignored until the
attention-seeking behavior no longer occurs. In his autobiography,
B. F. Skinner noted how he accidentally discovered the extinction of an operant response due to the malfunction of his laboratory equipment: When the extinction of a response has occurred, the discriminative stimulus is then known as an extinction stimulus (SΔ or
S-delta). When an S-delta is present, the reinforcing consequence which characteristically follows a behavior does not occur. This is the opposite of a
discriminative stimulus, which is a signal that reinforcement will occur. For instance, in an
operant conditioning chamber, if food pellets are only delivered when a response is emitted in the presence of a green light, the green light is a discriminative stimulus. If when a red light is present. food will not be delivered, then the red light is an extinction stimulus. (Food is used here as an example of a
reinforcer.) However, some make the distinction between extinction stimuli and "S-Delta" due to the behavior not having a reinforcement history, i.e. in an array of three items (phone, pen, paper) "Which one is the phone" the "pen" and "paper" will not produce a response in the teacher, but is not technically extinction on the first trial due to selecting "pen" or "paper", missing a reinforcement history. This still would be considered as S-Delta. == Extinction related phenomena ==