Countering Fear Renewal: Changes in the UCS Representation Generalize Across Contexts

被引:13
作者
Leer, Arne [1 ]
Engelhard, Iris M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utrecht, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands
关键词
human fear conditioning; UCS deflation; fear renewal; return of fear; extinction; COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY; ANXIETY DISORDERS; CONDITIONED FEAR; EYE-MOVEMENTS; ERASING FEAR; EXTINCTION; HUMANS; MEMORY; RECONSOLIDATION; ASSOCIATIONS;
D O I
10.1016/j.beth.2014.09.012
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
After treatment of anxiety disorders, fear often returns. Analogue studies show that outside the extinction context the conditional stimulus (CS) activates the acquisition memory (CS predicts unconditional stimulus; UCS), rather than the extinction memory (CS does not predict UCS). Conditioning theory postulates that fear also diminishes after a reduction in the subjective cost of the UCS, which can occur in absence of any changes in the CS-UCS association. We hypothesized that fear reduction via "UCS deflation" generalizes across context. Healthy students underwent acquisition in context A with neutral CSs and 100 dB white noise as UCS. One group received post-conditioning UCS exposure, in which UCS intensity decreased over time ("ABAdefl"). Another group received UCS presentations at equal intensity ( "ABActrl"). Two groups did a filler task ("ABB"; "ABA"). Then, all groups underwent extinction in context B and were retested in context A (ABA-groups) or B (ABB-group). During each CS participants rated UCS expectancy and UCS cost. Results showed the typical increase in UCS expectancy following the context switch from extinction to test phase. In contrast, UCS deflation caused a reduction in cost ratings that was maintained after the context change. Findings suggest that UCS deflation techniques may reduce fear renewal.
引用
收藏
页码:272 / 282
页数:11
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   First-line Treatment: A Critical Appraisal of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Developments and Alternatives [J].
Arch, Joanna J. ;
Craske, Michelle G. .
PSYCHIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA, 2009, 32 (03) :525-+
[2]   Toward a unified treatment for emotional disorders [J].
Barlow, DH ;
Allen, LB ;
Choate, ML .
BEHAVIOR THERAPY, 2004, 35 (02) :205-230
[3]   Context, ambiguity, and unlearning: Sources of relapse after behavioral extinction [J].
Bouton, ME .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2002, 52 (10) :976-986
[4]   COGNITIVE-PROCESSES IN ANXIETY [J].
BUTLER, G ;
MATHEWS, A .
ADVANCES IN BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 1983, 5 (01) :51-62
[5]   COMPULSIVE NEUROSIS - REVIEW OF LITERATURE [J].
CARR, AT .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1974, 81 (05) :311-318
[6]  
Craske M. G., 2012, J EXPT PSYCHOPATHOLO, V3, P322, DOI [https://doi.org/10.5127/jep.026511, 10.5127/jep.026511, DOI 10.5127/JEP.026511]
[7]   Cognitive biases in anxiety disorders and their effect on cognitive-behavioral treatment [J].
Craske, MG ;
Pontillo, DC .
BULLETIN OF THE MENNINGER CLINIC, 2001, 65 (01) :58-77
[8]  
Davey G., 1997, Phobias, P301
[9]   Adding imagery rescripting during extinction leads to less ABA renewal [J].
Dibbets, Pauline ;
Poort, Hanneke ;
Arntz, Arnoud .
JOURNAL OF BEHAVIOR THERAPY AND EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHIATRY, 2012, 43 (01) :614-624
[10]   Within-compound associations mediate the retrospective revaluation of causality judgements [J].
Dickinson, A ;
Burke, J .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY SECTION B-COMPARATIVE AND PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1996, 49 (01) :60-80