AX+, BX- Discrimination Learning in the Fear-Potentiated Startle Paradigm: Possible Relevance to Inhibitory Fear Learning in Extinction
Open Access
- 14 July 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Learning & Memory
- Vol. 11 (4), 464-475
- https://doi.org/10.1101/lm.74704
Abstract
The neural mechanisms of fear suppression most commonly are studied through the use of extinction, a behavioral procedure in which a feared stimulus (i.e., one previously paired with shock) is nonreinforced repeatedly, leading to a reduction or elimination of the fear response. Although extinction is perhaps the most convenient index of fear inhibition, a great deal of behavioral work suggests that postextinction training conditioned stimuli are both excitatory and inhibitory, making it difficult to determine whether a neural manipulation affects inhibition, excitation, or some combination thereof. For this reason we sought to develop a behavioral procedure that would render a stimulus primarily inhibitory while at the same time avoiding some of the issues raised by the traditional conditioned inhibition paradigm, namely second-order conditioning, external inhibition, and configural learning. Using the fear-potentiated startle paradigm, we adapted an AX+, BX- training procedure in which stimuli A and X were presented simultaneously and paired with shock, and stimuli B and X were presented simultaneously in the absence of shock. In testing, high levels of fear-potentiated startle were seen in the presence of A and AX and much lower levels were seen in the presence of B and AB, as would be predicted if stimulus B were a conditioned inhibitor. We believe this method is a viable alternative to the traditional conditioned inhibition training procedure and will be useful for studying the neural mechanisms of fear inhibition.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Olfactory-mediated fear-potentiated startle.Behavioral Neuroscience, 2002
- Olfactory-mediated fear-potentiated startle.Behavioral Neuroscience, 2002
- Potentiation of conditioned freezing following dorsomedial prefrontal cortex lesions does not interfere with fear reduction in mice.Behavioral Neuroscience, 2000
- Inhibition of fear-potentiated startle can be detected after the offset of a feature trained in a serial feature-negative discrimination.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes, 1997
- Fear-potentiated startle using three conditioned stimulus modalitiesLearning & Behavior, 1994
- The orienting response to brief auditory stimuli in preweanling and adult ratsDevelopmental Psychobiology, 1994
- Fear potentiation of the acoustic startle reflex using noises of various spectral frequencies as conditioned stimuliLearning & Behavior, 1992
- Conditioning of simultaneous and serial feature-positive discriminationsLearning & Behavior, 1981
- Stimulus processing and stimulus selection in rats with hippocampal lesionsBehavioral and Neural Biology, 1979
- CS habituation produces a “latent inhibition effect” but no active “conditioned inhibition”Learning and Motivation, 1972