In the face of unpredictable threat, rapid processing of external events and behavioral mobilization through early psychophysiological responses are crucial for survival. While unpredictable threat generally enhances early processing, it would seem adaptive to particularly increase sensitivity for unexpected events as they may signal danger. To examine this possibility, n = 77 participants performed an auditory oddball paradigm and received unpredictable shocks in threat but not in safe contexts while a stream of frequent (standard) and infrequent (deviant) tones was presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFear extinction is pivotal for inhibiting fear responding to former threat-predictive stimuli. In rodents, short intervals between fear acquisition and extinction impair extinction recall compared to long intervals. This is called Immediate Extinction Deficit (IED).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOscillatory synchronization in the theta-frequency band was found to play a causal role in binding information of different modalities in declarative memory. Moreover, there is first evidence from a laboratory study that theta-synchronized (vs. asynchronized) multimodal input in a classical fear conditioning paradigm resulted in better discrimination of a threat-associated stimulus when compared to perceptually similar stimuli never associated with the aversive unconditioned stimulus (US).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Learn Mem
October 2022
Memory often combines information from different sensory modalities. Animal studies show that synchronized neuronal activity in the theta band (4-8 Hz) binds multimodal associations. Studies with human participants have likewise established that theta-phase synchronization augments the formation of declarative video-tone pair memories.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging
November 2021
Background: Emerging human studies demonstrate that theta oscillations in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex are enhanced during fear recall (enhanced fear expression) and reduced during successful extinction recall (reduced fear expression). Although evidence suggests sex differences in fear recall and extinction recall, there are currently no human studies examining the oscillatory foundations of these memory processes separately in men and women.
Methods: Because previous studies suggest that estradiol partially mediates these sex differences, we examined 20 men (low estradiol and low progesterone), 20 women using oral contraceptives (low estradiol and low progesterone), and 20 free-cycling women during midcycle (high estradiol and low progesterone).
Neurons in the visual cortex sharpen their orientation tuning as humans learn aversive contingencies. A stimulus orientation (CS+) that reliably predicts an aversive noise (unconditioned stimulus: US) is selectively enhanced in lower-tier visual cortex, while similar unpaired orientations (CS-) are inhibited. Here, we examine in male volunteers how sharpened visual processing is affected by fear extinction learning (where no US is presented), and how fear and extinction memory undergo consolidation one day after the original learning episode.
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