Literature DB >> 15885654

Classical fear conditioning in the anxiety disorders: a meta-analysis.

Shmuel Lissek1, Alice S Powers, Erin B McClure, Elizabeth A Phelps, Girma Woldehawariat, Christian Grillon, Daniel S Pine.   

Abstract

Fear conditioning represents the process by which a neutral stimulus comes to evoke fear following its repeated pairing with an aversive stimulus. Although fear conditioning has long been considered a central pathogenic mechanism in anxiety disorders, studies employing lab-based conditioning paradigms provide inconsistent support for this idea. A quantitative review of 20 such studies, representing fear-learning scores for 453 anxiety patients and 455 healthy controls, was conducted to verify the aggregated result of this literature and to assess the moderating influences of study characteristics. Results point to modest increases in both acquisition of fear learning and conditioned responding during extinction among anxiety patients. Importantly, these patient-control differences are not apparent when looking at discrimination studies alone and primarily emerge from studies employing simple, single-cue paradigms where only danger cues are presented and no inhibition of fear to safety cues is required.

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Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15885654     DOI: 10.1016/j.brat.2004.10.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Behav Res Ther        ISSN: 0005-7967


  313 in total

1.  The development of fear learning and generalization in 8-13 year-olds.

Authors:  Catherine R Glenn; Daniel N Klein; Shmuel Lissek; Jennifer C Britton; Daniel S Pine; Greg Hajcak
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2011-11-09       Impact factor: 3.038

2.  Prefrontal cortical contributions during discriminative fear conditioning, extinction, and spontaneous recovery in rats.

Authors:  Erin L Zelinski; Nancy S Hong; Amanda V Tyndall; Brett Halsall; Robert J McDonald
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2010-05-07       Impact factor: 1.972

3.  Transfer of aversive respondent elicitation in accordance with equivalence relations.

Authors:  Miguel Rodríguez Valverde; Carmen Luciano; Dermot Barnes-Holmes
Journal:  J Exp Anal Behav       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 2.468

4.  Nonconscious fear is quickly acquired but swiftly forgotten.

Authors:  Candace M Raio; David Carmel; Marisa Carrasco; Elizabeth A Phelps
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2012-06-19       Impact factor: 10.834

5.  Nicotine Addiction and Psychiatric Disorders.

Authors:  Munir Gunes Kutlu; Vinay Parikh; Thomas J Gould
Journal:  Int Rev Neurobiol       Date:  2015-09-19       Impact factor: 3.230

6.  Heterogeneity in Fear Processing across and within Anxiety, Eating, and Compulsive Disorders.

Authors:  Abby J Fyer; Franklin R Schneier; Helen Blair Simpson; Tse Hwei Choo; Stephanie Tacopina; Marcia B Kimeldorf; Joanna E Steinglass; Melanie Wall; B Timothy Walsh
Journal:  J Affect Disord       Date:  2020-07-22       Impact factor: 4.839

Review 7.  From Pavlov to PTSD: the extinction of conditioned fear in rodents, humans, and anxiety disorders.

Authors:  Michael B VanElzakker; M Kathryn Dahlgren; F Caroline Davis; Stacey Dubois; Lisa M Shin
Journal:  Neurobiol Learn Mem       Date:  2013-12-07       Impact factor: 2.877

8.  Enhanced discrimination between threatening and safe contexts in high-anxious individuals.

Authors:  Evelyn Glotzbach-Schoon; Regina Tadda; Marta Andreatta; Christian Tröger; Heike Ewald; Christian Grillon; Paul Pauli; Andreas Mühlberger
Journal:  Biol Psychol       Date:  2013-02-04       Impact factor: 3.251

9.  Dorsal subcoeruleus nucleus (SubCD) involvement in context-associated fear memory consolidation.

Authors:  Donald F Siwek; Clifford M Knapp; Gurcharan Kaur; Subimal Datta
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2014-02-14       Impact factor: 1.972

10.  Human Sensory Cortex Contributes to the Long-Term Storage of Aversive Conditioning.

Authors:  Yuqi You; Joshua Brown; Wen Li
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2021-02-23       Impact factor: 6.167

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