Stress-Induced Recovery of Fears and Phobias
Accounts of human fears and phobias based on current conditioning models using data from adults are examined and found wanting. Instead, the characteristics of human phobias resemble the kind of learning found during the amnesic period of infancy. As certain neural systems mature, conditioning begin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Psychological review 1985-10, Vol.92 (4), p.512-531 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Accounts of human fears and phobias based on current conditioning
models using data from adults are examined and found wanting.
Instead, the characteristics of human phobias resemble the kind of
learning found during the amnesic period of infancy. As certain neural
systems mature, conditioning begins to exhibit adult
characteristics: context dependency, sharp generalization,
and rapid extinction. Although direct behavioral control by the early
learning systems wanes, the adult learning system seems to be structured
at least partially through the lasting influence of infantile
experience. Under (hormonal) stress, residues of early
experience are reinstated and incorporated into adult memory where they
directly control behavior. This control exhibits infantile
characteristics. The evidence suggests that once acquired, such
conditional fears might never be eliminated using traditional extinction or
counterconditioning procedures. The view leads to a renewed emphasis
upon the role of experience in human development, accepting the
disproportionate importance of infant experience as the foundation upon which
subsequent learning and cognitive function rest. |
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ISSN: | 0033-295X 1939-1471 |
DOI: | 10.1037/0033-295X.92.4.512 |