Allen M T, Myers C E, Servatius R J
School of Psychological Sciences, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO, United States; Stress and Motivated Behavior Institute, Syracuse, NY, United States.
Neurobehavioral Research Laboratory, Department of Veterans Affairs, VA New Jersey Health Care System, East Orange, NJ, United States; Department of Pharmacology, Physiology and Neuroscience, New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey, Newark, NJ, United States.
Behav Brain Res. 2016 May 1;304:86-91. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2016.02.007. Epub 2016 Feb 9.
Recent work has found that behaviorally inhibited (BI) individuals exhibit enhanced eyeblink conditioning in omission and yoked training as well as with schedules of partial reinforcement. We hypothesized that spacing CS-US paired trials over a longer period of time by extending and varying the inter-trial interval (ITI) would facilitate learning. All participants completed the Adult Measure of Behavioural Inhibition (AMBI) and were grouped as behaviorally inhibited (BI) and non-behaviorally inhibited (NI) based on a median split score of 15.5. All participants received 3 US alone trials and 30CS-US paired trials for acquisition training and 20CS alone trials for extinction training in one session. Conditioning stimuli were a 500 ms tone conditioned stimulus (CS) and a 50-ms air puff unconditional stimulus (US). Participants were randomly assigned to receive a short ITI (mean=30+/- 5s), a long ITI (mean=57+/- 5s) or a variable long ITI (mean=57 s, range 25-123 s). No significant ITI effects were observed for acquisition or extinction. Overall, anxiety vulnerable individuals exhibited enhanced conditioned eyeblink responses as compared to non-vulnerable individuals. This enhanced acquisition of CRs was significant in spaced training with a variable long ITI, but not the short or long ITI. There were no significant effects of ITI or BI on extinction. These findings are interpreted based on the idea that uncertainty plays a role in anxiety and can enhance associative learning in anxiety vulnerable individuals.
最近的研究发现,行为抑制型(BI)个体在省略训练、匹配训练以及部分强化训练中表现出更强的眨眼条件反射。我们假设,通过延长和改变试间间隔(ITI),在更长的时间段内间隔呈现条件刺激(CS)与非条件刺激(US)配对试验,将有助于学习。所有参与者都完成了成人行为抑制量表(AMBI),并根据15.5的中位数分割分数分为行为抑制型(BI)和非行为抑制型(NI)两组。所有参与者在一次训练中接受3次单独呈现非条件刺激(US)的试验和30次条件刺激(CS)与非条件刺激(US)配对的试验用于习得训练,以及20次单独呈现条件刺激(CS)的试验用于消退训练。条件刺激是一个500毫秒的纯音条件刺激(CS)和一个50毫秒的吹气非条件刺激(US)。参与者被随机分配接受短试间间隔(平均=30±5秒)、长试间间隔(平均=57±5秒)或可变长试间间隔(平均=57秒,范围25 - 123秒)。在习得或消退过程中未观察到显著的试间间隔效应。总体而言,与非易焦虑个体相比,易焦虑个体表现出更强的条件性眨眼反应。在可变长试间间隔的间隔训练中,这种增强的条件反应习得是显著的,但在短试间间隔或长试间间隔训练中并非如此。试间间隔或行为抑制对消退没有显著影响。这些发现基于不确定性在焦虑中起作用并且可以增强易焦虑个体的联想学习这一观点进行解释。