Escape learning

Learning to make a response in order to escape from an aversive event.  Closely related to avoidance learning.  Both types of learning occur as a consequence of negative reinforcement.  An example of escape learning is giving in to the demands of a figure of authority in order to escape from conditioned distress.  Learning to avoid such a person as a means of reducing the threat of anxiety-inducing encounters constitutes an example of avoidance learning.  Escape learning can be converted into avoidance learning through the provision of a warning signal prior to an aversive stimulus.  Both types of learning find their origins in the two-factor theory of avoidance learning proposed by Orval Hobart Mowrer (1907-1982). 

See Avoidance learning, Classical conditioning, Learned helplessness, Learning, Reinforcer