Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"fear" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Anxiolytic effects of diazepam in Trinidadian guppies exposed to chemical cues indicating predation risk Crane AL; Feyten LEA; Brusseau AJP; Dumaresq Synnott F; Ramnarine IW; Ferrari MCO; Brown GE; 40905336
CONCORDIA
2 Anxiolytic effects of diazepam in Trinidadian guppies exposed to chemical cues indicating predation risk Crane AL; Feyten LEA; Brusseau AJP; Dumaresq Synnott F; Ramnarine IW; Ferrari MCO; Brown GE; 40905351
CONCORDIA
3 Obsessive-compulsive symptoms moderate the effect of contamination motion on disgust intensity Pelzer M; Ouellet-Courtois C; Krause S; Coughtrey A; Fink-Lamotte J; 40858003
CCRH
4 Development and validation of the multidimensional Fear of Depression Recurrence Questionnaire (FoDRQ) Gumuchian ST; Boyle A; Kennedy G; Wong SF; Ellenbogen MA; 40391691
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Relationship Between Lumbar Multifidus Morphometry and Pain/Disability in Individuals With Chronic Nonspecific Low Back Pain After Considering Demographics, Fear-Avoidance Beliefs, Insomnia, and Spinal Degenerative Changes Pinto SM; Cheung JPY; Samartzis D; Karppinen J; Zheng YP; Pang MYC; Fortin M; Wong AYL; 40376565
SOH
6 Self-Ambivalence Is Indirectly Associated With Obsessive-Compulsive and Eating Disorder Symptoms Through Different Feared Self-Themes Wilson S; Mesli N; Mehak A; Racine SE; 40227164
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Cultural Adaptation and Validation of the Athlete Fear-Avoidance Questionnaire in Arabic: Preliminary Analysis of Fear-Avoidance in ACL-Reconstructed Recreational Players Alanazi R; Kashoo FZ; Alrashdi N; Alanazi S; Shaik AR; Sirajudeen MS; Alenazi A; Nambi G; Dover G; Alanazi AD; 40190690
HKAP
8 Integrating past experiences Leir TMW; Gardner MPH; 40146623
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Athlete Fear Avoidance, Depression, and Anxiety Are Associated with Acute Concussion Symptoms in Athletes Patlan I; Gamelin G; Khalaj K; Castonguay T; Dover G; 38673675
HKAP
10 Fear of depression recurrence among individuals with remitted depression: a qualitative interview study Stephanie T Gumuchian 38383311
PSYCHOLOGY
11 What is Learned Determines How Pavlovian Conditioned Fear is Consolidated in the Brain Leake J; Leidl DM; Lay BPP; Fam JP; Giles MC; Qureshi OA; Westbrook RF; Holmes NM; 37963767
CSBN
12 NMDA Receptors in the Basolateral Amygdala Complex Are Engaged for Pavlovian Fear Conditioning When an Animal's Predictions about Danger Are in Error Tuval Keidar 37607821
CSBN
13 Can immorality be contracted? Appraisals of moral disgust and contamination fear Ouellet-Courtois C; Radomsky AS; 37270955
PSYCHOLOGY
14 Danger Changes the Way the Brain Consolidates Neutral Information; and Does So by Interacting with Processes Involved in the Encoding of That Information Omar A Qureshi 36927572
PSYCHOLOGY
15 The fear of losing control Adam S Radomsky 36113905
PSYCHOLOGY
16 Alarm cues and alarmed conspecifics: neural activity during social learning from different cues in Trinidadian guppies Raina Fan 36043284
CSBN
17 Experimental chambers Persistent disruption of overexpectation learning after inactivation of the lateral orbitofrontal cortex in male rats Lay BPP; Choudhury R; Esber GR; Iordanova MD; 35932299
PSYCHOLOGY
18 Prediction error determines whether NMDA receptors in the basolateral amygdala complex are involved in Pavlovian fear conditioning Williams-Spooner MJ; Delaney AJ; Westbrook RF; Holmes NM; 35410880
PSYCHOLOGY
19 The rodent medial prefrontal cortex and associated circuits in orchestrating adaptive behavior under variable demands Howland JG; Ito R; Lapish CC; Villaruel FR; 35131398
PSYCHOLOGY
20 Mechanisms of higher-order learning in the amygdala Gostolupce D; Iordanova MD; Lay BPP; 34197867
PSYCHOLOGY
21 Association Between Pain Catastrophizing and Pain and Cardiovascular Changes During a Cold-Pressor Test in Athletes Lentini M; Scalia J; Lebel FB; Touma F; Jhajj A; Darlington PJ; Dover G; 34000018
PERFORM
22 Development and validation of the multidimensional version of the Fear of Self Questionnaire: Corrupted, culpable and malformed feared possible selves in obsessive-compulsive and body-dysmorphic symptoms. Aardema F, Radomsky AS, Moulding R, Wong SF, Bourguignon L, Giraldo-O'Meara M 33547834
PSYCHOLOGY
23 Neural substrates of appetitive and aversive prediction error. Iordanova MD, Yau JO, McDannald MA, Corbit LH 33453307
CSBN
24 Pain catastrophizing in athletes correlates with pain and cardiovascular changes during a painful cold pressor test Matylda L; Joseph S; Frédérike BL; Fadi T; Aneet J; Darlington PJ; Dover G; 33150380
PERFORM
25 Different methods of fear reduction are supported by distinct cortical substrates. Lay BP, Pitaru AA, Boulianne N, Esber GR, Iordanova MD 32589138
PSYCHOLOGY
26 Failure of fear extinction in insomnia: An evolutionary perspective. Perogamvros L, Castelnovo A, Samson D, Dang-Vu TT 32143023
PERFORM
27 An ecological framework of neophobia: from cells to organisms to populations. Crane AL, Brown GE, Chivers DP, Ferrari MCO 31599483
BIOLOGY
28 The Association between Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Subthreshold Anxiety Symptoms and Fear of Falling among Older Adults: Preliminary Results from a Pilot Study. Payette MC, Bélanger C, Benyebdri F, Filiatrault J, Bherer L, Bertrand JA, Nadeau A, Bruneau MA, Clerc D, Saint-Martin M, Cruz-Santiago D, Ménard C, Nguyen P, Vu TTM, Comte F, Bobeuf F, Grenier S 28452660
PERFORM

 

Title:Prediction error determines whether NMDA receptors in the basolateral amygdala complex are involved in Pavlovian fear conditioning
Authors:Williams-Spooner MJDelaney AJWestbrook RFHolmes NM
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35410880/
DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2156-21.2022
Publication:The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
Keywords:NMDA receptorbasolateral amygdalafear conditioninghigher-order conditioningprediction errorrat
PMID:35410880 Category: Date Added:2022-04-12
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
2 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
3 School of Biomedical Sciences, Charles Sturt University, Orange, NSW, Australia.

Description:

It is widely accepted that activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) is necessary for the formation of fear memories in the basolateral amygdala complex (BLA). This acceptance is based on findings that blockade of NMDAR in the BLA disrupts Pavlovian fear conditioning in rodents when initially innocuous stimuli are paired with aversive and unexpected events (surprising foot shock). The present study challenges this acceptance by showing that the involvement of NMDAR in Pavlovian fear conditioning is determined by prediction errors in relation to aversive events. In the initial experiments, male rats received a BLA infusion of the NMDAR antagonist, D-AP5 and were then exposed to pairings of a novel target stimulus and foot shock. This infusion disrupted acquisition of fear to the target when the shock was surprising (Experiments 1a, 1b, 2a, 2b, 3a, 3b); but spared fear to the target when the shock was expected based on the context, time and other stimuli that were present (Experiments 1a, 1b). Under the latter circumstances, fear to the target required activation of calcium permeable AMPAR (CP-AMPA; Experiments 4a, 4b, 4c); which, using electrophysiology, were shown to regulate the activity of interneurons in the BLA (Experiment 5). Thus, NMDAR-activation is not required for fear conditioning when danger occurs as expected given the context, time and stimuli present; but is required for fear conditioning when danger occurs unexpectedly. These findings are related to current theories of NMDAR function and ways that prediction errors might influence the substrates of fear memory formation in the BLA.Significance StatementIt is widely accepted that N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) in the basolateral amygdala complex (BLA) are activated by pairings of a conditioned stimulus (CS) and an aversive unconditioned (US) stimulus, leading to the synaptic changes that underlie formation of a CS-US association. The present findings are significant in showing that this theory is incomplete. When the aversive US is unexpected, animals encode all features of the situation (context, time and stimuli present) as a new fear/threat memory, which is regulated by NMDAR in the BLA. However, when the US is expected based on the context, time and stimuli present, the new fear memory is assimilated into networks that represent those features, which occurs independently of NMDAR-activation in the BLA.





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