TOWARD AN ACCOUNT OF CLINICAL ANXIETY PREDICATED ON BASIC, NEURALLY MAPPED MECHANISMS OF PAVLOVIAN FEAR-LEARNING: THE CASE FOR CONDITIONED OVERGENERALIZATION
The past two decades have brought dramatic progress in the neuroscience of anxiety due, in no small part, to animal findings specifying the neurobiology of Pavlovian fear‐conditioning. Fortuitously, this neurally mapped process of fear learning is widely expressed in humans, and has been centrally i...
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Published in | Depression and anxiety Vol. 29; no. 4; pp. 257 - 263 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
United States
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
01.04.2012
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The past two decades have brought dramatic progress in the neuroscience of anxiety due, in no small part, to animal findings specifying the neurobiology of Pavlovian fear‐conditioning. Fortuitously, this neurally mapped process of fear learning is widely expressed in humans, and has been centrally implicated in the etiology of clinical anxiety. Fear‐conditioning experiments in anxiety patients thus represent a unique opportunity to bring recent advances in animal neuroscience to bear on working, brain‐based models of clinical anxiety. The current presentation details the neural basis and clinical relevance of fear conditioning, and highlights generalization of conditioned fear to stimuli resembling the conditioned danger cue as one of the more robust conditioning markers of clinical anxiety. Studies testing such generalization across a variety of anxiety disorders (panic, generalized anxiety disorder, and social anxiety disorder) with systematic methods developed in animals will next be presented. Finally, neural accounts of overgeneralization deriving from animal and human data will be described with emphasis given to implications for the neurobiology and treatment of clinical anxiety. |
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Bibliography: | ArticleID:DA21922 istex:B38A5E25E1266DB63F025C2AD4CCB9A10FA8D5D2 ark:/67375/WNG-ML2ZVZ9Q-L National Institute of Mental Health - No. R00MH080130 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 ObjectType-Review-3 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 1091-4269 1520-6394 1520-6394 |
DOI: | 10.1002/da.21922 |