4.7 Article

From Fear to Safety and Back: Reversal of Fear in the Human Brain

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 28, Issue 45, Pages 11517-11525

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2265-08.2008

Keywords

fear conditioning; prediction error; reversal; amygdala; striatum; vmPFC

Categories

Funding

  1. Seaver Foundation
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 K05 MH067048, P50 MH58911, R21 MH072279]
  3. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  4. Human Frontiers Science Program
  5. Fulbright award

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Fear learning is a rapid and persistent process that promotes defense against threats and reduces the need to relearn about danger. However, it is also important to flexibly readjust fear behavior when circumstances change. Indeed, a failure to adjust to changing conditions may contribute to anxiety disorders. A central, yet neglected aspect of fear modulation is the ability to flexibly shift fear responses from one stimulus to another if a once-threatening stimulus becomes safe or a once-safe stimulus becomes threatening. In these situations, the inhibition of fear and the development of fear reactions co-occur but are directed at different targets, requiring accurate responding under continuous stress. To date, research on fear modulation has focused mainly on the shift from fear to safety by using paradigms such as extinction, resulting in a reduction of fear. The aim of the present study was to track the dynamic shifts from fear to safety and from safety to fear when these transitions occur simultaneously. We used functional neuroimaging in conjunction with a fear-conditioning reversal paradigm. Our results reveal a unique dissociation within the ventromedial prefrontal cortex between a safe stimulus that previously predicted danger and a naive safe stimulus. We show that amygdala and striatal responses tracked the fear-predictive stimuli, flexibly flipping their responses from one predictive stimulus to another. Moreover, prediction errors associated with reversal learning correlated with striatal activation. These results elucidate how fear is readjusted to appropriately track environmental changes, and the brain mechanisms underlying the flexible control of fear.

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