4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Generalized Anxiety Disorder Is Associated With Overgeneralization of Classically Conditioned Fear

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 75, Issue 11, Pages 909-915

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2013.07.025

Keywords

Fear conditioning; fear-potentiated startle; generalized; anxiety disorder; interpretation bias; pathophysiology; stimulus generalization

Funding

  1. Intramural NIH HHS Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [K99 MH080130, R00 MH080130] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Meta-analytic results of fear-conditioning studies in the anxiety disorders implicate generalization of conditioned fear to stimuli resembling the conditioned danger cue as one of the more robust conditioning markers of anxiety pathology. Due to the absence of conditioning studies assessing generalization in generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), results of this meta-analysis do not reveal whether such generalization abnormalities also apply to GAD. The current study fills this gap by behaviorally and psychophysiologically assessing levels of conditioned fear generalization across adults with and without GAD. Methods: Twenty-two patients with a DSM-IV-Text Revision diagnosis of GAD and 26 healthy comparison subjects were recruited and tested. The employed generalization paradigm consisted of quasi-randomly presented rings of gradually increasing size, with extreme sizes serving as conditioned danger cues (CS+) and conditioned safety cues. The rings of intermediary size served as generalization stimuli, creating a continuum of similarity between CS+ and conditioned safety cues across which to assess response slopes, referred to as generalization gradients. Primary outcome variables included slopes for fear-potentiated startle (electromyography) and self-reported risk ratings. Results: Behavioral and psychophysiological findings demonstrated overgeneralization of conditioned fear among patients with GAD. Specifically, generalization gradients were abnormally shallow among GAD patients, reflecting less degradation of the conditioned fear response as the presented stimulus differentiated from the CS+. Conclusions: Overgeneralization of conditioned fear to safe encounters resembling feared situations may contribute importantly to the psychopathology of GAD by proliferating anxiety cues in the individual's environment that are then capable of evoking and maintaining anxiety and worry associated with GAD.

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