Delayed Extinction Attenuates Conditioned Fear Renewal and Spontaneous Recovery in Humans

This study investigated whether the retention interval after an aversive learning experience influences the return of fear after extinction training. After fear conditioning, participants underwent extinction training either 5 min or 1 day later and in either the same room (same context) or a differ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral neuroscience 2009-08, Vol.123 (4), p.834-843
Hauptverfasser: Huff, Nicole C, Hernandez, Jose Alba, Blanding, Nineequa Q, LaBar, Kevin S
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container_title Behavioral neuroscience
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creator Huff, Nicole C
Hernandez, Jose Alba
Blanding, Nineequa Q
LaBar, Kevin S
description This study investigated whether the retention interval after an aversive learning experience influences the return of fear after extinction training. After fear conditioning, participants underwent extinction training either 5 min or 1 day later and in either the same room (same context) or a different room (context shift). The next day, conditioned fear was tested in the original room. When extinction took place immediately, fear renewal was robust and prolonged for context-shift participants, and spontaneous recovery was observed in the same-context participants. Delayed extinction, by contrast, yielded a brief form of fear renewal that reextinguished within the testing session for context-shift participants, and there was no spontaneous recovery in the same-context participants. The authors conclude that the passage of time allows for memory consolidation processes to promote the formation of distinct yet flexible emotional memory traces that confer an ability to recall extinction, even in an alternate context, and minimize the return of fear. Furthermore, immediate extinction can yield spontaneous recovery and prolong fear renewal. These findings have potential implications for ameliorating fear relapse in anxiety disorders.
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subjects Analysis of Variance
Behavior
Behavioral psychophysiology
Biological and medical sciences
Conditioned Fear
Conditioning, Classical
Electroshock
Environment
Extinction (Learning)
Extinction, Psychological
Fear & phobias
Fear - physiology
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Galvanic Skin Response
Human
Human subjects
Humans
Learning
Male
Memory
Neuropsychology
Photic Stimulation
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Spontaneous Recovery (Learning)
Studies
Time Factors
Young Adult
title Delayed Extinction Attenuates Conditioned Fear Renewal and Spontaneous Recovery in Humans
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