Neurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in Humans

<p>An inescapable component to survival in a dynamic environment is detecting and reacting to signals of danger. One of the most elegant processes animals possess to handle this complex task is classical conditioning, wherein stimuli associated with an aversive event acquire the capacity to el...

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Main Author: Dunsmoor, Joseph
Other Authors: LaBar, Kevin S
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5834
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-58342013-03-04T15:04:30ZNeurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in HumansDunsmoor, JosephPsychologyBehavioral sciencesNeurosciencesanxietyfear conditioningfunctional MRIgeneralization<p>An inescapable component to survival in a dynamic environment is detecting and reacting to signals of danger. One of the most elegant processes animals possess to handle this complex task is classical conditioning, wherein stimuli associated with an aversive event acquire the capacity to elicit defensive behaviors. This process helps ensure quick reactions prior to the occurrence of an imminent threat. A problem of living in a dynamic environment, however, is that reliable signals of danger are rarely re-encountered in the exact same form from one situation to the next. Thus, to be truly adaptive it is imperative for defensive responses to extend beyond a specific instance towards other exemplars that might portend the same negative outcome. While the phenomenon of stimulus generalization was recognized in the earliest studies of conditioning from Pavlov's laboratory, a century of conditioning research has not resolved how humans and other animals actually meet this challenge. The research presented herein employs a combination of psychophysiological and functional imaging methods to examine how humans recruit neurocognitive systems to determine what stimuli do (and do not) pose a threat. Results show that human fear generalization is a complex phenomenon affected by the perceptual and conceptual nature of the stimulus. Brain regions and functional networks involved in fear generalization comprise cortical areas involved in coding the representation of conditioned stimuli and subcortical regions involved conditioned learning and the production of behavioral responses, most notably the amygdala. These results reveal the importance of stimulus-specific factors in fear learning and generalization, provide support for anatomically constrained models of fear generalization, and contribute to the development of model systems of fear generalization processes in human anxiety disorders.</p>DissertationLaBar, Kevin S2012Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/5834
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
Behavioral sciences
Neurosciences
anxiety
fear conditioning
functional MRI
generalization
spellingShingle Psychology
Behavioral sciences
Neurosciences
anxiety
fear conditioning
functional MRI
generalization
Dunsmoor, Joseph
Neurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in Humans
description <p>An inescapable component to survival in a dynamic environment is detecting and reacting to signals of danger. One of the most elegant processes animals possess to handle this complex task is classical conditioning, wherein stimuli associated with an aversive event acquire the capacity to elicit defensive behaviors. This process helps ensure quick reactions prior to the occurrence of an imminent threat. A problem of living in a dynamic environment, however, is that reliable signals of danger are rarely re-encountered in the exact same form from one situation to the next. Thus, to be truly adaptive it is imperative for defensive responses to extend beyond a specific instance towards other exemplars that might portend the same negative outcome. While the phenomenon of stimulus generalization was recognized in the earliest studies of conditioning from Pavlov's laboratory, a century of conditioning research has not resolved how humans and other animals actually meet this challenge. The research presented herein employs a combination of psychophysiological and functional imaging methods to examine how humans recruit neurocognitive systems to determine what stimuli do (and do not) pose a threat. Results show that human fear generalization is a complex phenomenon affected by the perceptual and conceptual nature of the stimulus. Brain regions and functional networks involved in fear generalization comprise cortical areas involved in coding the representation of conditioned stimuli and subcortical regions involved conditioned learning and the production of behavioral responses, most notably the amygdala. These results reveal the importance of stimulus-specific factors in fear learning and generalization, provide support for anatomically constrained models of fear generalization, and contribute to the development of model systems of fear generalization processes in human anxiety disorders.</p> === Dissertation
author2 LaBar, Kevin S
author_facet LaBar, Kevin S
Dunsmoor, Joseph
author Dunsmoor, Joseph
author_sort Dunsmoor, Joseph
title Neurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in Humans
title_short Neurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in Humans
title_full Neurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in Humans
title_fullStr Neurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in Humans
title_full_unstemmed Neurobehavioral Mechanisms Supporting the Generalization of Learned Fear in Humans
title_sort neurobehavioral mechanisms supporting the generalization of learned fear in humans
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5834
work_keys_str_mv AT dunsmoorjoseph neurobehavioralmechanismssupportingthegeneralizationoflearnedfearinhumans
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