| Literature DB >> 33983460 |
Julia Reinhard1, Anna Slyschak2, Miriam A Schiele3, Marta Andreatta4,5, Katharina Kneer2, Andreas Reif6, Katharina Domschke3, Matthias Gamer7, Paul Pauli4,5,6,7,8, Jürgen Deckert8, Marcel Romanos2.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to investigate age-related differences in fear learning and generalization in healthy children and adolescents (n = 133), aged 8-17 years, using an aversive discriminative fear conditioning and generalization paradigm adapted from Lau et al. (2008). In the current task, participants underwent 24 trials of discriminative conditioning of two female faces with neutral facial expressions, with (CS+) or without (CS-) a 95-dB loud female scream, presented simultaneously with a fearful facial expression (US). The discriminative conditioning was followed by 72 generalization trials (12 CS+, 12 GS1, 12 GS2, 12 GS3, 12 GS4, and 12 CS-): four generalization stimuli depicting gradual morphs from CS+ to CS- in 20%-steps were created for the generalization phases. We hypothesized that generalization in children and adolescents is negatively correlated with age. The subjective ratings of valence, arousal, and US expectancy (the probability of an aversive noise following each stimulus), as well as skin conductance responses (SCRs) were measured. Repeated-measures ANOVAs on ratings and SCR amplitudes were calculated with the within-subject factors stimulus type (CS+, CS-, GS1-4) and phase (Pre-Acquisition, Acquisition 1, Acquisition 2, Generalization 1, Generalization 2). To analyze the modulatory role of age, we additionally calculated ANCOVAs considering age as covariate. Results indicated that (1) subjective and physiological responses were generally lower with increasing age irrespective to the stimulus quality, and (2) stimulus discrimination improved with increasing age paralleled by reduced overgeneralization in older individuals. Longitudinal follow-up studies are required to analyze fear generalization with regard to brain maturational aspects and clarify whether overgeneralization of conditioned fear promotes the development of anxiety disorders or vice versa.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety disorders; Childhood and adolescence; Development; Fear conditioning; Fear generalization; Overgeneralization
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33983460 PMCID: PMC9532335 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-021-01797-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 5.349
Results of ANCOVAs at pre-acquisition/acquisition
| Main effect of age | Stimulus type × age | Phase × age | Stimulus type × phase × age | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arousal | ||||
| Valence | ||||
| US expectancy | ||||
| SCR |
Results concerning age on arousal, valence and US expectancy ratings as well as on skin conductance response (SCR)
Fig. 1Correlations between age and differential scores between CS+ and CS− in US expectancy ratings in (a) Acquisition 1 (ACQ1) and (b) Acquisition 2 (ACQ2). The significant positive correlation indicates better discrimination between CS+ and CS− in older participants after ACQ 1. There was no significant correlation with age, however, after ACQ 2
Fig. 2Correlations between age and the generalization index (GI) score based on the US expectancy ratings. The negative correlation indicated that older participants showed reduced generalization of conditioned fear