Secondary extinction reduces reinstatement of threat expectancy and conditioned skin conductance responses in human fear conditioning (Exp. 2, Control Group)

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Abstract

Background and objectives Secondary extinction refers to the phenomenon that extinction of one conditioned stimulus (CS) results in the reduction of conditioned responses for other CSs conditioned with the same unconditioned stimulus (US). Previous research with rats has demonstrated that secondary extinction can interfere with the return of conditioned fear after a reinstatement manipulation. Here we investigated this phenomenon in two pre-registered studies in humans. Method In both experiments, distinct CSs were paired with an electrical stimulation. Next, conditioned reactions to both CSs were extinguished and thereafter reinstated through the administration of three unsignaled electrical stimulations. Crucially, before participants continued with the reinstatement test, half of the participants received secondary extinction trials whereas the other half did not receive these trials. Results Our results indicate that secondary extinction reduced reinstatement of threat expectancies and skin conductance responses, but the effect on skin conductance was only found in the second experiment. Limitations The studies were conducted in a laboratory setting with healthy students. Additional research will be required to determine the feasibility of applying secondary extinction in a (sub)clinical context. Conclusions To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of secondary extinction and its effect on reinstatement of conditioned fear in humans. We relate our findings to the earlier research with rats and discuss their relevance for exposure therapy.

ID 215

Authors

Gaëtan Mertens, Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands Arne Leer, Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands Eva Anna Maria van Dis, Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands Lotte Vermeer, Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands Anne Steenhuizen, Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands Lisa van der Veen, Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands Iris M. Engelhard, Department of Clinical Psychology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands

Year

2019

DOI of Publication

10.1016/j.jbtep.2018.09.007

Persistent Identifier to Dataset

10.17605/OSF.IO/DXPB3

Where was the data collected?

Utrecht University, the Netherlands

How to Cite

Mertens, G., Leer, A., van Dis, E., & Engelhard, I. (2021, May 4). Secondary extinction after reinstatement in human fear conditioning. https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/C3DTN

Participant Information

Participant Age

Experimental Group

Control Group: No secondary extincition between reinstatement and reinstatement test

Stimuli

Drug Administration

No

Conditioning Protocol

Differential

Instructions CS-US Contingencies

Uninstructed (whole exp)

Number of Different US

1

US Modality

electrotactile

Number of Different CS+

2

CS+ 1: Reinforcement Rate (%)

100

CS+ 2: Reinforcement Rate (%)

100

CS+ 3: Reinforcement Rate (%)

Number of Different CS-

1

CS Modality

visual

Data Collected During MRI

No

Physiological Measures

measured trialwise & untransformed

Skin Conductance Response

Yes Yes

Skin Conductance Level

No No

Pupil Size

No No

Fear Potentiated Startle/Startle EMG

No No

Heart Rate

No No

Ratings

US Expectancy

Yes

US Intensity Rating

Yes

CS Valence

No

CS Arousal

No

CS Fear

No

CS Stress

No

CS Anxiety

No

Contingency Awareness

No

Questionnaires

State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-T)