ePoster

WITHDRAWAL-RELATED LEARNING (WDL): A RELIEF-BASED CONDITIONING FRAMEWORK WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR ADDICTION AND TRAUMA

Katherine Archerand 2 co-authors

Scripps Research

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS03-08AM-261

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS03-08AM-261

Poster preview

WITHDRAWAL-RELATED LEARNING (WDL): A RELIEF-BASED CONDITIONING FRAMEWORK WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR ADDICTION AND TRAUMA poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS03-08AM-261

Abstract

Classical stimulus-induced reinstatement models have been foundational in drug abuse research. In these paradigms, animals are trained to self-administer a drug paired with discrete stimuli, their responding is extinguished, and reinstatement is later triggered by those same stimuli. These approaches reliably demonstrate that stimuli linked to the drug’s positive reinforcing effects can elicit relapse-like behavior. However, such models often have limitations as they primarily capture reward or positive-driven stimulus reactivity and may not fully reflect the compulsive and punishment-resistant aspects of relapse seen in drug addiction. The Withdrawal-Related Learning (WDL) procedure was designed to address this problem. WDL examines conditioning to withdrawal relief, where a drug is experienced both as rewarding and as alleviating dysphoria, anxiety, and anhedonia. Stimuli associated with this “relief” (negative reinforcement) acquire incentive salience and can exert enhanced motivational control relative to stimuli conditioned in the nondependent state. WDL represents a negative-reinforcement learning paradigm in which relief from overwhelming aversive states becomes the primary reinforcer; the same learning rule operates in trauma exposure, including sexual abuse, where transient relief from fear, shame, or hyperarousal conditions maladaptive behaviors and contexts that perpetuate harm. By formalizing relief-based conditioning as a dominant negative-reinforcement mechanism, WDL provides a mechanistic bridge linking addiction relapse to trauma-associated maladaptive learning, including patterns observed in sexual abuse. Here, we examined survivor interviews in which negative reinforcement appeared to play a critical role in maintaining abusive dynamics, and propose that relief-based learning is a key mechanism contributing to victim entrapment across cycles of abuse.

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.