Fear Without Context:Acute Stress Modulates the Balance of Cue-Dependent and Contextual Fear Learning

Link:
Autor/in:
Erscheinungsjahr:
2019
Medientyp:
Text
Schlagworte:
  • amygdala
  • context
  • cortisol
  • cue
  • fear conditioning
  • hippocampus
  • open data
  • preregistered
  • stress
Beschreibung:
  • During a threatening encounter, people can learn to associate the aversive event with a discrete preceding cue or with the context in which the event took place, corresponding to cue-dependent and context-dependent fear conditioning, respectively. Which of these forms of fear learning prevails has critical implications for fear-related psychopathology. We tested here whether acute stress may modulate the balance of cue-dependent and contextual fear learning. Participants (N = 72) underwent a stress or control manipulation 30 min before they completed a fear-learning task in a virtual environment that allowed both cued and contextual fear learning. Results showed equally strong cue- and context-dependent fear conditioning in the control group. Stress, however, abolished contextual fear learning, which was directly correlated with the activity of the stress hormone cortisol, and made cue-dependent fear more resistant to extinction. These results are the first to show that stress favors cue-dependent over contextual fear learning.

Lizenz:
  • info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
Quellsystem:
Forschungsinformationssystem der UHH

Interne Metadaten
Quelldatensatz
oai:www.edit.fis.uni-hamburg.de:publications/23d7dfbe-8e77-45b8-b2a9-a9693b3162e6