Neuropsychobiology of fear-induced bradycardia in humans: progress and pitfalls.

Mol Psychiatry

Department of Psychological Science, 4201 Social and Behavioral Sciences Gateway, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Fear conditioning has changed a lot over the last hundred years, improving how scientists study fear responses.
  • One method called fear-induced bradycardia looks at how heart rates slow down when people feel threatened.
  • This review wants to make bradycardia a more important tool in understanding fear in humans and gives tips on how to study it effectively.

Article Abstract

In the last century, the paradigm of fear conditioning has greatly evolved in a variety of scientific fields. The techniques, protocols, and analysis methods now most used have undergone a progressive development, theoretical and technological, improving the quality of scientific productions. Fear-induced bradycardia is among these techniques and represents the temporary deceleration of heart beats in response to negative outcomes. However, it has often been used as a secondary measure to assess defensive responding to threat, along other more popular techniques. In this review, we aim at paving the road for its employment as an additional tool in fear conditioning experiments in humans. After an overview of the studies carried out throughout the last century, we describe more recent evidence up to the most contemporary research insights. Lastly, we provide some guidelines concerning the best practices to adopt in human fear conditioning studies which aim to investigate fear-induced bradycardia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11609102PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41380-024-02600-xDOI Listing

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