Effects of Experiencing CS–US Pairings on Instructed Fear Reversal
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Society for Neuroscience
Materia
Amygdala Fear instructions Learning
Fecha
2023-07-26Referencia bibliográfica
Wisniewski D, Braem S, González-García C, De Houwer J, Brass M. Effects of Experiencing CS–US Pairings on Instructed Fear Reversal. Journal of Neuroscience 26 July 2023, 43 (30) 5546-5558; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0665-22.2023
Patrocinador
European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Grant 665501; Flemish Science Foundation (FWO; Grant FWO. KAN.2019.0023.01); Special Research Fund of Ghent University; European Research Council Starting Grant (European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program, Grant 852570); European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant 835767; Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Grant ID IJC2019-040208-I); Ghent University Grant BOF16/MET_V/002; Einstein Strategic Professorship (Einstein Foundation Berlin); FWO (project G.0231.13)Resumen
Fear learning allows us to identify and anticipate aversive events and adapt our behavior accordingly. This is often thought to rely on associative learning mechanisms where an initially neutral conditioned stimulus (CS) is repeatedly paired with an aversive unconditioned stimulus (US), eventually leading to the CS also being perceived as aversive and threatening. Importantly, however, humans also show verbal fear learning. Namely, they have the ability to change their responses to stimuli rapidly through verbal instructions about CS–US pairings. Past research on the link between experience-based and verbal fear learning indicated that verbal instructions about a reversal of CS–US pairings can fully override the effects of previously experienced CS–US pairings, as measured through fear ratings, skin conductance, and fear-potentiated startle. However, it remains an open question whether such instructions can also annul learned CS representations in the brain. Here, we used a fear reversal paradigm (female and male participants) in conjunction with representational similarity analysis of fMRI data to test whether verbal instructions fully override the effects of experienced CS–US pairings in fear-related brain regions or not. Previous research suggests that only the right amygdala should show lingering representations of previously experienced threat (“pavlovian trace”). Unexpectedly, we found evidence for the residual effect of prior CS–US experience to be much more widespread than anticipated, in the amygdala but also cortical regions like the dorsal anterior cingulate or dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. This finding shines a new light on the interaction of different fear learning mechanisms, at times with unexpected consequences.