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Thalamocortical interactions underlying visual fear conditioning in humans

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TLDR
This study demonstrates for the first time the central role of the thalamus in fear conditioning in humans, and confirms ideas from the animal literature, and demonstrates the more general effect of fearful faces perception.
Abstract
Despite a strong focus on the role of the amygdala in fear conditioning, recent works point to a more distributed network supporting fear conditioning. We aimed to elucidate interactions between subcortical and cortical regions in fear conditioning in humans. To do this, we used two fearful faces as conditioned stimuli (CS) and an electrical stimulation at the left hand, paired with one of the CS, as unconditioned stimulus (US). The luminance of the CS was rhythmically modulated leading to "entrainment" of brain oscillations at a predefined modulation frequency. Steady-state responses (SSR) were recorded by MEG. In addition to occipital regions, spectral analysis of SSR revealed increased power during fear conditioning particularly for thalamus and cerebellum contralateral to the upcoming US. Using thalamus and amygdala as seed-regions, directed functional connectivity was calculated to capture the modulation of interactions that underlie fear conditioning. Importantly, this analysis showed that the thalamus drives the fusiform area during fear conditioning, while amygdala captures the more general effect of fearful faces perception. This study confirms ideas from the animal literature, and demonstrates for the first time the central role of the thalamus in fear conditioning in humans.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A thalamic bridge from sensory perception to cognition.

TL;DR: It is proposed that modulator inputs reaching all thalamic nuclei may be critical for integrative purposes when environmental signals are computed and the thalamus appears as the bridge linking perception, cognition and possibly affect.
Journal ArticleDOI

High‐precision magnetoencephalography for reconstructing amygdalar and hippocampal oscillations during prediction of safety and threat

TL;DR: It is suggested that high‐precision MEG is sensitive to neural activity of the human amygdala and hippocampus during threat conditioning and shed light on the oscillation‐mediated mechanisms underpinning retrieval and extinction of fear memories in humans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Limbic areas are functionally decoupled and visual cortex takes a more central role during fear conditioning in humans.

TL;DR: Graph Theory was used to uncover changes in the architecture of the brain functional network shaped by fear conditioning and speculated that both, the reduced coupling in some regions and the emerging centrality of others, contribute to the efficient processing of fear-relevant information during fear learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrafast Cortical Gain Adaptation in the Human Brain by Trial-To-Trial Changes of Associative Strength in Fear Learning.

TL;DR: It is shown that human visual cortex activity can be modulated quickly according to ultrafast contingency changes within a few learning trials, and this finding extends to frontal brain regions when the cue and the aversive event are separated in time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conditioned inhibitory and excitatory gain modulations of visual cortex in fear conditioning: Effects of analysis strategies of magnetocortical responses

TL;DR: Conditional inhibition of ssVEF responses for fear-irrelevant cues for specific gradiometer sensor types is demonstrated using the traditional analysis technique and for all sensor types when applying a GLM to the sensor space.
References
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