Odriozola Paola, Kribakaran Sahana, Cohodes Emily M, Zacharek Sadie J, McCauley Sarah, Haberman Jason T, Quintela Lauren A, Hernandez Cristian, Spencer Hannah, Pruessner Luise, Caballero Camila, Gee Dylan G
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Biol Psychiatry Glob Open Sci. 2023 Jun 8;4(1):155-164. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsgos.2023.05.007. eCollection 2024 Jan.
Safety signal learning (SSL), based on conditioned inhibition of fear in the presence of learned safety, can effectively attenuate threat responses in animal models and humans. Difficulty regulating threat responses is a core feature of anxiety disorders, suggesting that SSL may provide a novel mechanism for fear reduction. Cross-species evidence suggests that SSL involves functional connectivity between the anterior hippocampus and the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex. However, the neural mechanisms supporting SSL have not been examined in relation to trait anxiety or while controlling for the effect of novelty.
Here, we investigated the neural mechanisms involved in SSL and associations with trait anxiety in a sample of 64 healthy (non-clinically anxious) adults (ages 18-30 years; 43 female, 21 male) using physiological, behavioral, and neuroimaging (functional magnetic resonance imaging) data collected during an SSL task.
During SSL, compared with individuals with lower trait anxiety, individuals with higher trait anxiety showed less fear reduction as well as altered hippocampal activation and hippocampal-dorsal anterior cingulate cortex functional connectivity, and lower inferior frontal gyrus and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex activation. Importantly, the findings show that SSL reduces threat responding, across learning and over and above the effect of novelty, and involves hippocampal activation.
These findings provide new insights into the nature of SSL and suggest that there may be meaningful variation in SSL and related neural correlates as a function of trait anxiety, with implications for better understanding fear reduction and optimizing interventions for individuals with anxiety disorders.
基于在习得的安全情境下对恐惧的条件性抑制的安全信号学习(SSL),能够有效减弱动物模型和人类的威胁反应。难以调节威胁反应是焦虑症的一个核心特征,这表明SSL可能为减轻恐惧提供一种新机制。跨物种证据表明,SSL涉及前海马体与背侧前扣带回皮质之间的功能连接。然而,尚未针对特质焦虑或在控制新奇性影响的情况下,对支持SSL的神经机制进行研究。
在此,我们使用在一项SSL任务期间收集的生理、行为和神经成像(功能磁共振成像)数据,对64名健康(非临床焦虑)成年人(年龄18 - 30岁;43名女性,21名男性)样本中涉及SSL的神经机制及其与特质焦虑的关联进行了研究。
在SSL过程中,与特质焦虑较低的个体相比,特质焦虑较高的个体表现出恐惧减轻较少,海马体激活和海马体 - 背侧前扣带回皮质功能连接改变,以及额下回和腹外侧前额叶皮质激活较低。重要的是,研究结果表明,SSL在学习过程中以及在新奇性影响之外均可减少威胁反应,并且涉及海马体激活。
这些发现为SSL的本质提供了新的见解,并表明SSL及相关神经关联可能会因特质焦虑而存在有意义的差异,这对于更好地理解恐惧减轻以及优化焦虑症个体的干预措施具有重要意义。