Updating fearful memories with extinction training during reconsolidation: a human study using auditory aversive stimuli

Learning to fear danger in the environment is essential to survival, but dysregulation of the fear system is at the core of many anxiety disorders. As a consequence, a great interest has emerged in developing strategies for suppressing fear memories in maladaptive cases. Recent research has focused...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2012-06, Vol.7 (6), p.e38849-e38849
Hauptverfasser: Oyarzún, Javiera P, Lopez-Barroso, Diana, Fuentemilla, Lluís, Cucurell, David, Pedraza, Carmen, Rodriguez-Fornells, Antoni, de Diego-Balaguer, Ruth
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container_title PloS one
container_volume 7
creator Oyarzún, Javiera P
Lopez-Barroso, Diana
Fuentemilla, Lluís
Cucurell, David
Pedraza, Carmen
Rodriguez-Fornells, Antoni
de Diego-Balaguer, Ruth
description Learning to fear danger in the environment is essential to survival, but dysregulation of the fear system is at the core of many anxiety disorders. As a consequence, a great interest has emerged in developing strategies for suppressing fear memories in maladaptive cases. Recent research has focused in the process of reconsolidation where memories become labile after being retrieved. In a behavioral manipulation, Schiller et al., (2010) reported that extinction training, administrated during memory reconsolidation, could erase fear responses. The implications of this study are crucial for the possible treatment of anxiety disorders without the administration of drugs. However, attempts to replicate this effect by other groups have been so far unsuccessful. We sought out to reproduce Schiller et al., (2010) findings in a different fear conditioning paradigm based on auditory aversive stimuli instead of electric shock. Following a within-subject design, participants were conditioned to two different sounds and skin conductance response (SCR) was recorded as a measure of fear. Our results demonstrated that only the conditioned stimulus that was reminded 10 minutes before extinction training did not reinstate a fear response after a reminder trial consisting of the presentation of the unconditioned stimuli. For the first time, we replicated Schiller et al., (2010) behavioral manipulation and extended it to an auditory fear conditioning paradigm.
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subjects Acoustic Stimulation
Acoustics
Anxiety
Auditory discrimination learning
Biology
Biomedical research
Brain research
Cognition & reasoning
Conditioned stimulus
Conditioning
Conductance
Disorders
Drugs
Environmental audits
Extinction, Psychological - physiology
Fear
Fear & phobias
Fear - physiology
Fear conditioning
Female
Galvanic Skin Response
Hazards
Humans
Male
Medical research
Medicine
Memory
Memory - physiology
Neurobiology
Neurosciences
Photic Stimulation
Post traumatic stress disorder
Protein synthesis
Proteins
Psychopharmacology
Reminder
Reminder effects
Resistance
Rodents
Skin conductance response
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Stimuli
Studies
Training
Young Adult
title Updating fearful memories with extinction training during reconsolidation: a human study using auditory aversive stimuli
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