The Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, MA, USA ; Harvard Medical School Boston, MA, USA ; The Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging Charlestown, MA, USA.
The Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, MA, USA.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2014 Sep 5;8:624. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00624. eCollection 2014.
Fear generalization is the production of fear responses to a stimulus that is similar-but not identical-to a threatening stimulus. Although prior studies have found that fear generalization magnitudes are qualitatively related to the degree of perceptual similarity to the threatening stimulus, the precise relationship between these two functions has not been measured systematically. Also, it remains unknown whether fear generalization mechanisms differ for social and non-social information. To examine these questions, we measured perceptual discrimination and fear generalization in the same subjects, using images of human faces and non-face control stimuli ("blobs") that were perceptually matched to the faces. First, each subject's ability to discriminate between pairs of faces or blobs was measured. Each subject then underwent a Pavlovian fear conditioning procedure, in which each of the paired conditioned stimuli (CS) were either followed (CS+) or not followed (CS-) by a shock. Skin conductance responses (SCRs) were also measured. Subjects were then presented with the CS+, CS- and five levels of a CS+-to-CS- morph continuum between the paired stimuli, which were identified based on individual discrimination thresholds. Finally, subjects rated the likelihood that each stimulus had been followed by a shock. Subjects showed both autonomic (SCR-based) and conscious (ratings-based) fear responses to morphs that they could not discriminate from the CS+ (generalization). For both faces and non-face objects, fear generalization was not found above discrimination thresholds. However, subjects exhibited greater fear generalization in the shock likelihood ratings compared to the SCRs, particularly for faces. These findings reveal that autonomic threat detection mechanisms in humans are highly sensitive to small perceptual differences between stimuli. Also, the conscious evaluation of threat shows broader generalization than autonomic responses, biased towards labeling a stimulus as threatening.
恐惧泛化是指对与威胁性刺激相似但不完全相同的刺激产生恐惧反应。虽然先前的研究发现,恐惧泛化程度与对威胁性刺激的感知相似程度有定性关系,但这两个函数之间的精确关系尚未系统地测量。此外,对于社会和非社会信息,恐惧泛化机制是否不同仍然未知。为了研究这些问题,我们使用人类面孔的图像和与面孔感知匹配的非面孔控制刺激(“斑点”),在相同的受试者中测量感知辨别和恐惧泛化。首先,测量每个受试者辨别面孔或斑点对的能力。然后,每个受试者都接受了一种条件反射恐惧训练程序,其中配对的条件刺激(CS)中的每一个都被跟随(CS+)或不跟随(CS-)一个电击。还测量了皮肤电导反应(SCR)。然后,向受试者呈现 CS+、CS-和配对刺激之间的五个 CS+到 CS-形态连续体水平,这些水平是根据个体辨别阈值确定的。最后,受试者对每个刺激是否被电击跟随的可能性进行评分。受试者对他们无法从 CS+(泛化)中区分的形态表现出自主(基于 SCR)和有意识(基于评分)的恐惧反应。对于面孔和非面孔物体,在辨别阈值之上没有发现恐惧泛化。然而,与 SCR 相比,在对威胁的意识评估中,受试者表现出更大的恐惧泛化,尤其是对于面孔。这些发现表明,人类的自主威胁检测机制对刺激之间的微小感知差异非常敏感。此外,对威胁的有意识评估显示出比自主反应更广泛的泛化,偏向于将刺激标记为威胁。