School of Psychological Sciences, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO, USA.
Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2023 Jun;23(3):869-893. doi: 10.3758/s13415-023-01077-5. Epub 2023 Mar 22.
Few individuals who experience trauma develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Therefore, the identification of individual differences that signal increased risk for PTSD is important. Lissek et al. (2006) proposed using a weak rather than a strong situation to identify individual differences. A weak situation involves less-salient cues as well as some degree of uncertainty, which reveal individual differences. A strong situation involves salient cues with little uncertainty, which produce consistently strong responses. Results from fear conditioning studies that support this hypothesis are discussed briefly. This review focuses on recent findings from three learning tasks: classical eyeblink conditioning, avoidance learning, and a computer-based task. These tasks are interpreted as weaker learning situations in that they involve some degree of uncertainty. Individual differences in learning based on behavioral inhibition, which is a risk factor for PTSD, are explored. Specifically, behaviorally inhibited individuals and rodents (i.e., Wistar Kyoto rats), as well as individuals expressing PTSD symptoms, exhibit enhanced eyeblink conditioning. Behaviorally inhibited rodents also demonstrate enhanced avoidance responding (i.e., lever pressing). Both enhanced eyeblink conditioning and avoidance are most evident with schedules of partial reinforcement. Behaviorally inhibited individuals also performed better on reward and punishment trials than noninhibited controls in a probabilistic category learning task. Overall, the use of weaker situations with uncertain relationships may be more ecologically valid than learning tasks in which the aversive event occurs on every trial and may provide more sensitivity for identifying individual differences in learning for those at risk for, or expressing, PTSD symptoms.
经历创伤的个体中,只有少数会发展为创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)。因此,识别出增加 PTSD 风险的个体差异非常重要。Lissek 等人(2006)提出使用较弱而非较强的情境来识别个体差异。较弱的情境涉及不太明显的线索以及一定程度的不确定性,从而揭示个体差异。较强的情境涉及明显的线索和较少的不确定性,产生一致强烈的反应。简要讨论了支持这一假设的恐惧条件反射研究结果。本综述重点介绍了三个学习任务的最新发现:经典眨眼条件反射、回避学习和基于计算机的任务。这些任务被解释为较弱的学习情境,因为它们涉及一定程度的不确定性。基于行为抑制的学习个体差异是 PTSD 的一个风险因素,对此进行了探讨。具体来说,行为抑制个体和啮齿动物(即 Wistar Kyoto 大鼠)以及表现出 PTSD 症状的个体表现出增强的眨眼条件反射。行为抑制啮齿动物还表现出增强的回避反应(即压杆)。增强的眨眼条件反射和回避反应在部分强化的时间表中最为明显。在概率类别学习任务中,行为抑制个体在奖励和惩罚试验中的表现也优于非抑制对照组。总体而言,使用具有不确定关系的较弱情境可能比在每个试验中发生厌恶事件的学习任务更具生态有效性,并且可能更敏感地识别出具有 PTSD 症状风险或表达 PTSD 症状的个体的学习差异。