The Influence of State Anxiety on Fear Discrimination and Extinction in Females.

Front Psychol

Department of Clinical Psychological Science, Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience, Maastricht University Maastricht, Netherlands.

Published: March 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pathological anxiety is linked to poor inhibition of fear responses, affecting not only anxiety patients but also those prone to anxiety.
  • A study with healthy women showed that higher state anxiety reduced their ability to distinguish between a feared stimulus (CS+) and a safe one (CS-), impacting their learning during fear conditioning.
  • Increased state anxiety not only weakened this discrimination but also led to more negative feelings towards the stimuli, indicating that stress can hinder associative learning through stimulus generalization.

Article Abstract

Formal theories have linked pathological anxiety to a failure in fear response inhibition. Previously, we showed that aberrant response inhibition is not restricted to anxiety patients, but can also be observed in anxiety-prone adults. However, less is known about the influence of currently experienced levels of anxiety on inhibitory learning. The topic is highly important as state anxiety has a debilitating effect on cognition, emotion, and physiology and is linked to several anxiety disorders. In the present study, healthy female volunteers performed a fear conditioning task, after being informed that they will have to perform the Trier Social Stress Test task ( = 25; experimental group) or a control task ( = 25; control group) upon completion of the conditioning task. The results showed that higher levels of state anxiety corresponded with a reduced discrimination between a stimulus (CS+) typically followed by an aversive event and a stimulus (CS-) that is never followed by an aversive event both during the acquisition and the extinction phase. No effect of state anxiety on the skin conductance response associated with CS+ and CS- was found. Additionally, higher levels of state anxiety coincided with more negative valence ratings of the CSs. The results suggest that increased stress-induced state anxiety might lead to stimulus generalization during fear acquisition, thereby impairing associative learning.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5352667PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00347DOI Listing

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