Anastasides Nicole, Beck Kevin D, Pang Kevin C H, Servatius Richard J, Gilbertson Mark W, Orr Scott P, Myers Catherine E
a Department of Veterans Affairs , VA New Jersey Health Care System , East Orange , NJ , USA .
b Department of Pharmacology , Physiology, and Neuroscience, New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey , Newark , NJ , USA .
Stress. 2015;18(4):484-9. doi: 10.3109/10253890.2015.1053450. Epub 2015 Sep 15.
One interpretation of re-experiencing symptoms in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is that memories related to emotional information are stored strongly, but with insufficient specificity, so that stimuli which are minimally related to the traumatic event are sufficient to trigger recall. If so, re-experiencing symptoms may reflect a general bias against encoding background information during a learning experience, and this tendency might not be limited to learning about traumatic or even autobiographical events. To test this possibility, we administered a discrimination-and-transfer task to 60 Veterans (11.2% female, mean age 54.0 years) self-assessed for PTSD symptoms in order to examine whether re-experiencing symptoms were associated with increased generalization following associative learning. The discrimination task involved learning to choose the rewarded object from each of six object pairs; each pair differed in color or shape but not both. In the transfer phase, the irrelevant feature in each pair was altered. Regression analysis revealed no relationships between re-experiencing symptoms and initial discrimination learning. However, re-experiencing symptom scores contributed to the prediction of transfer performance. Other PTSD symptom clusters (avoidance/numbing, hyperarousal) did not account for significant additional variance. The results are consistent with an emerging interpretation of re-experiencing symptoms as reflecting a learning bias that favors generalization at the expense of specificity. Future studies will be needed to determine whether this learning bias may pre-date and confer risk for, re-experiencing symptoms in individuals subsequently exposed to trauma, or emerges only in the wake of trauma exposure and PTSD symptom development.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)中重新体验症状的一种解释是,与情感信息相关的记忆被强烈存储,但特异性不足,以至于与创伤事件仅有极小关联的刺激就足以触发回忆。如果是这样,重新体验症状可能反映出在学习经历中对编码背景信息的普遍偏见,而且这种倾向可能不仅限于学习创伤性事件甚至自传性事件。为了检验这种可能性,我们对60名自我评估有PTSD症状的退伍军人(11.2%为女性,平均年龄54.0岁)进行了一项辨别与迁移任务,以检查重新体验症状是否与联想学习后泛化增加有关。辨别任务包括学会从六对物体中的每一对中选择有奖励的物体;每一对在颜色或形状上不同,但不是两者都不同。在迁移阶段,改变每一对中不相关的特征。回归分析显示重新体验症状与初始辨别学习之间没有关系。然而,重新体验症状得分有助于预测迁移表现。其他PTSD症状群(回避/麻木、过度警觉)并未解释显著的额外方差。这些结果与一种新出现的对重新体验症状的解释一致,即反映出一种以牺牲特异性为代价而有利于泛化的学习偏见。未来的研究将需要确定这种学习偏见是否可能在个体随后遭受创伤之前就存在并赋予重新体验症状的风险,或者是否仅在创伤暴露和PTSD症状发展之后才出现。