| Literature DB >> 16319311 |
Almut I Weike1, Alfons O Hamm, Harald T Schupp, Uwe Runge, Henry W S Schroeder, Christof Kessler.
Abstract
The present study investigated fear-potentiated startle and autonomic learning in brain-lesioned patients in a classical fear-conditioning paradigm. Startle blink and skin conductance responses of 30 patients who underwent unilateral temporal lobectomy because of drug-resistant epilepsy were compared with those of 32 healthy controls. As expected, temporal lobectomy patients showed a general impairment in fear conditioning relative to controls. This impairment did not differ with respect to the affected hemisphere. Moreover, while fear-conditioned startle potentiation in healthy controls was independent of contingency awareness, skin conductance discrimination was only observed for those participants who correctly recognized the stimulus contingencies. Patients who acquired a declarative memory of the contingencies also showed intact skin conductance discrimination but failed to exhibit fear-potentiated startle. The present findings support a two-levels-of-learning account of human fear conditioning and also demonstrate that the amygdala is crucially involved in fear learning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16319311 PMCID: PMC6725655 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2032-05.2005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci ISSN: 0270-6474 Impact factor: 6.167