Literature DB >> 31828815

"Prepared" fear or socio-cultural learning? Fear conditioned to guns, snakes, and spiders is eliminated by instructed extinction in a within-participant differential fear conditioning paradigm.

Camilla C Luck1, Rachel R Patterson1, Ottmar V Lipp1.   

Abstract

Across three experiments, we investigated whether electrodermal responses conditioned to ontogenetic fear-relevant (pointed guns) and phylogenetic fear-relevant stimuli (snakes and spiders) would resist instructed extinction in a within-participant differential fear conditioning paradigm. Instructed extinction involves informing participants before extinction that the unconditional stimulus (US) will no longer be presented. This manipulation has been shown to abolish fear conditioned to fear-irrelevant conditional stimuli, but is said to leave fear conditioned to images of snakes and spiders intact. The latter finding, however, has only been demonstrated when fear-relevance is manipulated between-groups. It is also not known whether instructed extinction affects fear conditioned to ontogenetic fear-relevant stimuli, such as pointed guns. In Experiment 1, we demonstrated that fear conditioned to images of pointed guns does not resist instructed extinction. In Experiment 2, we detected some evidence to suggest that fear conditioned to images of snakes and spiders survives instructed extinction but this evidence was not conclusive. In Experiment 3, we directly compared the effects of instructed extinction on fear conditioned to snakes and spiders and to guns and provide strong evidence that fear conditioned to both classes of stimuli is reduced after instructed extinction with no differences between ontogenetic and phylogenetic stimuli. The current results suggest that when fear relevance is manipulated within-participants fear conditioned to both phylogenetic and ontogenetic, fear-relevant stimuli responds to instructed extinction providing evidence in favor of a socio-cultural explanation for "preparedness" effects.
© 2019 Society for Psychophysiological Research.

Entities:  

Keywords:  electrodermal responding; fear conditioning; instructed extinction; ontogenetic fear-relevant; phylogenetic fear-relevant; preparedness theory

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31828815     DOI: 10.1111/psyp.13516

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychophysiology        ISSN: 0048-5772            Impact factor:   4.016


  1 in total

1.  Conditional stimulus choices affect fear learning: Comparing fear conditioning with neutral faces and shapes or angry faces.

Authors:  Luke J Ney; Camilla C Luck; Allison M Waters; Ottmar V Lipp
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 4.348

  1 in total

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