Pavlovian Conditioning, Fear Circuits and Extinction of Fear

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Pavlovian Conditioning, Fear Circuits and Extinction of Fear. Valance Wang Translational Neuromodeling & Computational Neuroeconomics Fall 2013. Overview. Pavlovian conditioning Definition and variations Fear conditioning and fear circuits in the brain Amygdala in human and animals - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Pavlovian Conditioning, Fear Circuits and Extinction of Fear

Valance WangTranslational Neuromodeling & Computational Neuroeconomics

Fall 2013

Overview

Pavlovian conditioning

Definition and variations

Fear conditioning and fear circuits in the brain

Amygdala in human and animals

Extinction of fear

Pavlovian conditioning (or classical conditioning):

Unconditional Stimulus → Unconditional Response

Conditioning: ( CS → US )→ UR

US is biologically relevant:

reward (food, water) and punishment (noise, electric shock)

air-puff to the eye

Variations of Pavlovian Conditioning

Second-order conditioning

CS1 → (CS2 → US)

Preconditioning

(CS1 → CS2) → US

Contingency in Pavlovian Conditioning

P( US | CS ) = 0.4

P( US | CS ) = P( US | ¬CS) = P(US) = 0.4

P( US | ¬CS ) = 0.4

¬CS CSUS

¬CSCS US

¬CSCS US

Contingency in Pavlovian Conditioning

P( US | CS ) = 0.4

P( US | CS ) = P( US | ¬CS) = P(US) = 0.4

P( US | ¬CS ) = 0.4

¬CS CSUS

¬CSCS US

¬CSCS US

Is this associative learning?

Blocking

Unblocking

Causal Attribution in Pavlovian Conditioning

N

Shock

L N

Shock

L

N

Shock

L N

Shock!

L

Relative validity of X

?

Relative validity of X

Relation to drug addiction

Fear Conditioning

Fear conditioning

Fear conditioning works across phyla:

snails, worms, flies

fish, pigeons, rabbits, rats, cats, dogs and humans

Human Amygdala

In humans

Patients with amygdala damage shows deficits in perception of emotional meaning of the faces, esp. fearful faces, and emotional tone of voices.

fMRI studies show that amygdala is activated more strongly in presence of fearful and angry faces than of happy faces.

Fear conditioning leads to increased amygdala activity.

Fear Circuits in the Brain

Sensory inputs mainly terminate in LA:

auditory thalamus

auditory cortex

fear conditioning to a simple auditory CS can be mediated by either pathway

damage to LA interferes with fear conditioning

Thalamo-amygdala pathway:

single unit recordings show cortical pathway learns more slowly over trials than the thalamic pathway

fMRI show that human amygdala’s activity changes during conditioning correlates with the thalamus but not the cortex

Contextual conditioning:

After conditioning, rats exhibited fear when returning back to the experiment chamber

Contextual conditioning is mediated via hippocampus

Ventral hippocampus projects to B and AB

Damage to these areas interferes with contextual conditioning

Output pathway: CE projects to

brainstem

lateral hypothalamus → blood pressure

peraqueductal grey → freezing

bed nucleus of stria terminalis → pituitary-adrenal stress hormone

Role of amygdala in fear memory:

Inactivation of amygdala during training prevents fear conditioning;

Inactivation of amygdala immediately after conditioning blocks memory formation.

In humans, damage to amygdala interferes with implicit emotional memory, but not explicit memories about emotions (which is controlled by medial temporal lobe).

Extinction of Fear

Extinction training: repeated presentation of CS without US

Extinction training has not been successful, because the fear may return, for example with stress.

A recent study in human attempts to extinct the fear by targeting at memory reconsolidation window.

During reconsolidation, stored memory is rendered labile after being retrieved. Pharmacological manipulation in the reconsolidation window results in inability to retrieve the memory at later times.

Extinction training conducted during the reconsolidation window successfully block the return of fear response.

The effect remains after 1 year.

The extinction effect is CS-specific.

References

Bouton (2006): Chapter 3: The nuts and bolts of conditioning.

LeDoux (2000): Emotion circuits in the brain.

Schiller et al. (2010): Preventing the return of fear in humans using reconsolidation update mechanisms.

THank you!