Exaggerated or persistent fear is a common occurrence in psychiatric disorders. Although much progress has been made in uncovering the neural basis of fear learning through studies of Pavlovian conditioning, little is known about how to reduce or eliminate traumatic memories in pathological cases, which is of great clinical concern. Associative emotional memories can be formed when an initially neutral stimulus (conditioned stimulus, CS;e.g., a tone) acquires the ability to elicit fear responses after being paired with an unconditioned stimulus (US;e.g., a shock). Two paradigms (blockade of reconsolidation and extinction) have been used in the laboratory setting to reduce acquired fear (Nader et al., 2000;REF, YEAR);however, the clinical efficacy of these techniques has been limited: reconsolidation blockade requires potentially toxic drugs, while extinction is not typically permanent. My preliminary findings indicated that we have devised a novel behavioral paradigm that attenuates and prevents the return of fear memories. Our results indicate that subtle modifications to a commonly employed clinical treatment (exposure therapy) could greatly improve outcome, and reduce the potential for relapse in individuals suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder or specific phobias. In the proposed studies, I propose to examine the neural mechanisms that underlie this persistent attenuation of fear, in order to disambiguate how our novel paradigm distinguishes itself from standard extinction mechanisms. We will perform these experiments in rat and human studies in parallel, and then test whether this form of therapy can be used to treat individuals that suffer from specific phobias.

Public Health Relevance

Exaggerated or persistent fear is a common occurrence in psychiatric disorders. Two paradigms (blockade of reconsolidation and extinction) have been used in the laboratory setting to reduce acquired fear;however, the clinical efficacy of these techniques has been limited. Here, we present a novel behavioral paradigm that attenuates and prevents the return of fear memories. Our findings indicate that subtle modifications to a commonly employed clinical treatment (exposure therapy) could greatly improve outcome, and reduce the potential for relapse in individuals suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder or specific phobias.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Exploratory/Developmental Grants (R21)
Project #
5R21MH086805-02
Application #
8011230
Study Section
Biobehavioral Regulation, Learning and Ethology Study Section (BRLE)
Program Officer
Vicentic, Aleksandra
Project Start
2010-01-01
Project End
2012-12-31
Budget Start
2011-01-01
Budget End
2012-12-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$178,913
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Texas Austin
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
170230239
City
Austin
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
78712
Auchter, Allison; Cormack, Lawrence K; Niv, Yael et al. (2017) Reconsolidation-Extinction Interactions in Fear Memory Attenuation: The Role of Inter-Trial Interval Variability. Front Behav Neurosci 11:2
Gershman, Samuel J; Monfils, Marie-H; Norman, Kenneth A et al. (2017) The computational nature of memory modification. Elife 6:
Lee, Hongjoo J; Haberman, Rebecca P; Roquet, Rheall F et al. (2015) Extinction and Retrieval + Extinction of Conditioned Fear Differentially Activate Medial Prefrontal Cortex and Amygdala in Rats. Front Behav Neurosci 9:369
Tedesco, Vincenzo; Roquet, Rheall F; DeMis, John et al. (2014) Extinction, applied after retrieval of auditory fear memory, selectively increases zinc-finger protein 268 and phosphorylated ribosomal protein S6 expression in prefrontal cortex and lateral amygdala. Neurobiol Learn Mem 115:78-85
Jones, Carolyn E; Riha, Penny D; Gore, Andrea C et al. (2014) Social transmission of Pavlovian fear: fear-conditioning by-proxy in related female rats. Anim Cogn 17:827-34
Shumake, Jason; Furgeson-Moreira, Sergio; Monfils, Marie H (2014) Predictability and heritability of individual differences in fear learning. Anim Cogn 17:1207-21
Schiller, Daniela; Kanen, Jonathan W; LeDoux, Joseph E et al. (2013) Extinction during reconsolidation of threat memory diminishes prefrontal cortex involvement. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 110:20040-5
Auber, Alessia; Tedesco, Vincenzo; Jones, Carolyn E et al. (2013) Post-retrieval extinction as reconsolidation interference: methodological issues or boundary conditions? Psychopharmacology (Berl) 226:631-47
Gershman, Samuel J; Jones, Carolyn E; Norman, Kenneth A et al. (2013) Gradual extinction prevents the return of fear: implications for the discovery of state. Front Behav Neurosci 7:164
Jones, Carolyn E; Ringuet, Stephanie; Monfils, Marie-H (2013) Learned together, extinguished apart: reducing fear to complex stimuli. Learn Mem 20:674-85

Showing the most recent 10 out of 11 publications