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Learning mechanisms underlying threat absence and threat relief: Influences of trait anxiety.
Neurobiology of Learning and Memory 2017 November
Impaired safety learning has been proposed asa risk factor for anxiety disorders, but safety can be indicated by either threat absence or threat termination (i.e., relief). Here, we investigated the role of trait anxiety for both kinds of safety learning. Ninety-one participants underwent an acquisition phase during which one shape (threat CS) predicted a painful electric shock (unconditioned stimulus, US), one shape (relief CS) followed the US, and one shape (absence CS) became never associated with the US. In a following extinction phase, the three cues were presented again plus a control shape (control CS). We found successful threat conditioning as threat CS was rated as more aversive (negative, arousing, anxiogenic and associated with US) than the other cues, and it elicited startle potentiation as well asa larger skin conductance response (SCR). Safety cues were rated equally positive and (non-)anxiogenic, but still lower than control CS, whereas physiologically relief CS elicited stronger appetitive responses (startle attenuation and low SCR) than absence CS. Interestingly, an increase in trait anxiety was associated with a decrease in the differences between absence CS and threat CS responses reflected in contingency ratings during extinction as well as stronger fear-startle responses to absence CS. In sum, physiological responses but not ratings triggered by a relief signal compared to a threat-absence signal, indicated that the former is more appetitive than the latter. Strikingly, trait anxiety specifically mediated learning of threat absence, but not of threat termination, indicating that high trait anxious individuals experience relief normally, but have deficits in identifying signals of threat absence.
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