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Human Fear Conditioning and Extinction in Neuroimaging: A Systematic Review

TLDR
Differences concerning experimental factors may partly explain the variance between neuroimaging investigations on human fear conditioning and extinction and should be taken into serious consideration in the planning and the interpretation of research projects.
Abstract
Fear conditioning and extinction are basic forms of associative learning that have gained considerable clinical relevance in enhancing our understanding of anxiety disorders and facilitating their treatment. Modern neuroimaging techniques have significantly aided the identification of anatomical structures and networks involved in fear conditioning. On closer inspection, there is considerable variation in methodology and results between studies. This systematic review provides an overview of the current neuroimaging literature on fear conditioning and extinction on healthy subjects, taking into account methodological issues such as the conditioning paradigm. A Pubmed search, as of December 2008, was performed and supplemented by manual searches of bibliographies of key articles. Two independent reviewers made the final study selection and data extraction. A total of 46 studies on cued fear conditioning and/or extinction on healthy volunteers using positron emission tomography or functional magnetic resonance imaging were reviewed. The influence of specific experimental factors, such as contingency and timing parameters, assessment of conditioned responses, and characteristics of conditioned and unconditioned stimuli, on cerebral activation patterns was examined. Results were summarized descriptively. A network consisting of fear-related brain areas, such as amygdala, insula, and anterior cingulate cortex, is activated independently of design parameters. However, some neuroimaging studies do not report these findings in the presence of methodological heterogeneities. Furthermore, other brain areas are differentially activated, depending on specific design parameters. These include stronger hippocampal activation in trace conditioning and tactile stimulation. Furthermore, tactile unconditioned stimuli enhance activation of pain related, motor, and somatosensory areas. Differences concerning experimental factors may partly explain the variance between neuroimaging investigations on human fear conditioning and extinction and should, therefore, be taken into serious consideration in the planning and the interpretation of research projects.

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The integration of negative affect, pain and cognitive control in the cingulate cortex

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that negative affect, pain and cognitive control activate an overlapping region of the dorsal cingulate — the anterior midcingulate cortex (aMCC), which constitutes a hub where information about reinforcers can be linked to motor centres responsible for expressing affect and executing goal-directed behaviour.
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The contextual brain: implications for fear conditioning, extinction and psychopathology

TL;DR: Studies of Pavlovian fear conditioning and extinction in rodents and humans suggest that a neural circuit including the hippocampus, amygdala and medial prefrontal cortex is involved in the learning and memory processes that enable context-dependent behaviour.
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Plastic Synaptic Networks of the Amygdala for the Acquisition, Expression, and Extinction of Conditioned Fear

TL;DR: Pavlovian fear conditioning as a model and the amygdala as a key component for the acquisition and extinction of fear responses are focused on.
Journal ArticleDOI

Obsessive-compulsive disorder: beyond segregated cortico-striatal pathways

TL;DR: Proposed features of OCD pathophysiology beyond the classic parallel cortico-striatal pathways are elaborate and it is argued that this evidence suggests that fear extinction, in addition to behavioral inhibition, is impaired in OCD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anatomy of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia: a meta-analysis.

TL;DR: The anatomical distribution of the co-ordinates of gray matter differences was meta-analysed using Anatomical Likelihood Estimation in patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder as mentioned in this paper, where gray matter reductions were more extensive and involved limbic and neocortical structures as well as the paralimbic regions affected in bipolar disorder.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Emotion Circuits in the Brain

TL;DR: The field of neuroscience has, after a long period of looking the other way, again embraced emotion as an important research area, and much of the progress has come from studies of fear, and especially fear conditioning as mentioned in this paper.
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Emotion Circuits in the Brain

TL;DR: This work has pinpointed the amygdala as an important component of the system involved in the acquisition, storage, and expression of fear memory and has elucidated in detail how stimuli enter, travel through, and exit the amygdala.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pain affect encoded in human anterior cingulate but not somatosensory cortex.

TL;DR: These findings provide direct experimental evidence in humans linking frontal-lobe limbic activity with pain affect, as originally suggested by early clinical lesion studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurobiology of Pavlovian fear conditioning.

TL;DR: Advances in neural circuits underlying fear conditioning have been mapped, synaptic plasticity in these circuits has been identified, and biochemical and genetic manipulations are beginning to unravel the molecular machinery responsible for the storage of fear memories.
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