| Literature DB >> 23342060 |
Florian Bublatzky1, Pedro M Guerra, M Carmen Pastor, Harald T Schupp, Jaime Vila.
Abstract
The present study examined the effects of sustained anticipatory anxiety on the affective modulation of the eyeblink startle reflex. Towards this end, pleasant, neutral and unpleasant pictures were presented as a continuous stream during alternating threat-of-shock and safety periods, which were cued by colored picture frames. Orbicularis-EMG to auditory startle probes and electrodermal activity were recorded. Previous findings regarding affective picture valence and threat-of-shock modulation were replicated. Of main interest, anticipating aversive events and viewing affective pictures additively modulated defensive activation. Specifically, despite overall potentiated startle blink magnitude in threat-of-shock conditions, the startle reflex remained sensitive to hedonic picture valence. Finally, skin conductance level revealed sustained sympathetic activation throughout the entire experiment during threat- compared to safety-periods. Overall, defensive activation by physical threat appears to operate independently from reflex modulation by picture media. The present data confirms the importance of simultaneously manipulating phasic-fear and sustained-anxiety in studying both normal and abnormal anxiety.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23342060 PMCID: PMC3546963 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0054003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the experimental procedure (A) and stimulus presentation (B).
Emotional and neutral pictures were randomly presented in a continuous picture stream (each 4 s). Participants were verbally instructed that the colored picture frames (blue or green) indicated either threat-of-shock or safety periods. Abbreviations P, N, U refer to pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant picture contents; I refers to instructions slides announcing “Shock possible” or “No shock” preceding each 72-s period of threat-of-shock or safety.
Figure 2Mean magnitude (±SEM) of startle reflex as a function of threat-of-shock or safety, for pleasant, neutral and unpleasant pictures.
Figure 3Mean skin conductance level (±SEM) for threat-of-shock and safety conditions across time course (begin, middle, end) of the experiment.