| Literature DB >> 26922673 |
Kalina J Michalska1, Tomer Shechner2, Melanie Hong3, Jennifer C Britton4, Ellen Leibenluft5, Daniel S Pine5, Nathan A Fox3.
Abstract
The current study examined developmental changes in fear learning and generalization in 54 healthy 5-10-year old children using a novel fear conditioning paradigm. In this task, the conditioned stimuli (CS+/CS-) were two blue and yellow colored cartoon bells, and the unconditioned stimulus was an unpleasant loud alarm sound presented with a red cartoon bell. Physiological and subjective data were acquired. Three weeks after conditioning, 48 of these participants viewed the CS-, CS+, and morphed images resembling the CS+. Participants made threat-safety discriminations while appraising threat and remembering the CS+. Although no age-related differences in fear learning emerged, patterns of generalization were qualified by child age. Older children demonstrated better discrimination between the CS+ and CS morphs than younger age groups and also reported more fear to stimuli resembling the CS+ than younger children. Clinical implications and future directions are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Aversive conditioning; Development; Extinction recall; Fear generalization; Fear learning; Skin conductance
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26922673 PMCID: PMC5103629 DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2016.01.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Child Psychol ISSN: 0022-0965