2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2005.02.025
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Fear Potentiation and Fear Inhibition in a Human Fear-Potentiated Startle Paradigm

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

15
188
2

Year Published

2006
2006
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
7
1

Relationship

4
4

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 131 publications
(205 citation statements)
references
References 16 publications
15
188
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Thus the AB trials are referred to as conditioned inhibition test trials and indicate the ability to transfer safety to a danger cue. Consistent with these predictions, we have found greater startle magnitude in the presence of AX vs. BX and in the presence of AX vs. AB (Jovanovic et al, 2005).…”
supporting
confidence: 88%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Thus the AB trials are referred to as conditioned inhibition test trials and indicate the ability to transfer safety to a danger cue. Consistent with these predictions, we have found greater startle magnitude in the presence of AX vs. BX and in the presence of AX vs. AB (Jovanovic et al, 2005).…”
supporting
confidence: 88%
“…The startle data were used from a paradigm designed to test fear inhibition (see Jovanovic et al, 2005) and used more stimuli combinations than will be discussed here. The session began with a 1-min acclimation period consisting of 70-dB(A) SPL broadband noise, which continued as the background noise throughout the session.…”
Section: Startle Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In any case, it must be noted that most previous studies conducted in this area do not provide a direct test of differences in inhibition learning (see Mineka & Oehlberg, 2008). Recently, new experimental methods have been developed (Jovanovic et al, 2005;Kindt & Soeter, 2014), which can assess the independent contributions of fear excitation and fear inhibition, although, to our knowledge, they have not been tested in GAD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Davis and Grillon then went on to further show that FPS is altered in several psychopathologies related to aberrant anxiety states including panic disorder (Grillon et al, 1994a), PTSD (Morgan et al, 1995a(Morgan et al, , 1996. An important leap forward in the field of safety learning and its translational aspects was therefore the description of FPS as a measure of fear inhibition resulting from safety learning in a human conditional discrimination paradigm (Jovanovic et al, 2005). This study translates a discrimination procedure in rats based on earlier learning theory experiments (Rescorla, 1971;Wagner et al, 1968) to humans and sets the basis for examining the role and potential alterations of learned safety in patients with affective disorders using FPS as a tool for objective assessment of the safety response.…”
Section: Translational Aspects and Potential Applications In Clinicalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By contrast, impaired safety learning presumably shares aspects of the behavior described in criterion D, hyperarousal (specifically point 4 'Hypervigilance' and point 5 'Exaggerated startle response'), as the inability to properly respond to safety cues can lead to hypervigilance (Jovanovic et al, 2009;Jovanovic et al, 2010) and learned safety acts to reduce auditory FPS responses (see, eg, Jovanovic et al, 2005;Jovanovic et al, 2013). The fact that fear extinction and safety learning seem to model different symptomatological aspects of PTSD can be explained by their distinct neurobiological features, including neural circuitry and molecular signaling involved and suggests the two paradigms as complementing animal models in PTSD basic and translational research.…”
Section: Translational Aspects and Potential Applications In Clinicalmentioning
confidence: 99%