Haaker Jan, Golkar Armita, Hermans Dirk, Lonsdorf Tina B
Institute for Systems Neuroscience, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf, 20246 Hamburg, Germany Karolinska Institute, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
Karolinska Institute, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden.
Learn Mem. 2014 Aug 15;21(9):424-40. doi: 10.1101/lm.036053.114. Print 2014 Sep.
In human research, studies of return of fear (ROF) phenomena, and reinstatement in particular, began only a decade ago and recently are more widely used, e.g., as outcome measures for fear/extinction memory manipulations (e.g., reconsolidation). As reinstatement research in humans is still in its infancy, providing an overview of its stability and boundary conditions and summarizing methodological challenges is timely to foster fruitful future research. As a translational endeavor, clarifying the circumstances under which (experimental) reinstatement occurs may offer a first step toward understanding relapse as a clinical phenomenon and pave the way for the development of new pharmacological or behavioral ways to prevent ROF. The current state of research does not yet allow pinpointing these circumstances in detail and we hope this review will aid the research field to advance in this direction. As an introduction, we begin with a synopsis of rodent work on reinstatement and theories that have been proposed to explain the findings. The review however mainly focuses on reinstatement in humans. We first describe details and variations of the experimental setup in reinstatement studies in humans and give a general overview of results. We continue with a compilation of possible experimental boundary conditions and end with the role of individual differences and behavioral and/or pharmacological manipulations. Furthermore, we compile important methodological and design details on the published studies in humans and end with open research questions and some important methodological and design recommendations as a guide for future research.
在人体研究中,对恐惧重现(ROF)现象,尤其是恢复现象的研究仅仅始于十年前,且最近才得到更广泛的应用,例如,作为恐惧/消退记忆操纵(如重新巩固)的结果指标。由于人体恢复研究仍处于起步阶段,概述其稳定性和边界条件并总结方法学挑战对于促进未来富有成效的研究而言是及时的。作为一项转化性研究工作,阐明(实验性)恢复发生的情况可能是理解复发这一临床现象的第一步,并为开发预防恐惧重现的新药理学或行为方法铺平道路。目前的研究状况尚无法详细确定这些情况,我们希望这篇综述将有助于该研究领域朝这个方向前进。作为引言,我们首先概述啮齿动物恢复研究以及为解释这些发现而提出的理论。然而,这篇综述主要关注人体恢复。我们首先描述人体恢复研究中实验设置的细节和变化,并对结果进行总体概述。接着,我们汇总可能的实验边界条件,并以个体差异以及行为和/或药理学操纵的作用作为结尾。此外,我们汇总已发表的人体研究中的重要方法学和设计细节,并以开放性研究问题以及一些重要的方法学和设计建议作为结尾,为未来研究提供指导。