J. Neurosci. 2006 Sep
Kalisch R, Korenfeld E, Stephan KE, Weiskopf N, Seymour B, Dolan RJ
Abstract
In fear extinction, an animal learns that a conditioned stimulus (CS) no longer predicts a noxious stimulus [unconditioned stimulus (UCS)] to which it had previously been associated, leading to inhibition of the conditioned response (CR). Extinction creates a new CS-noUCS memory trace, competing with the initial fear (CS-UCS) memory. Recall of extinction memory and, hence, CR inhibition at later CS encounters is facilitated by contextual stimuli present during extinction training. In line with t
...[more]heoretical predictions derived from animal studies, we show that, after extinction, a CS-evoked engagement of human ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC) and hippocampus is context dependent, being expressed in an extinction, but not a conditioning, context. Likewise, a positive correlation between VMPFC and hippocampal activity is extinction context dependent. Thus, a VMPFC-hippocampal network provides for context-dependent recall of human extinction memory, consistent with a view that hippocampus confers context dependence on VMPFC.
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Mesh Headings:
Adolescent, Adult, Avoidance Learning, Brain Mapping, Conditioning (Psychology), Electric Stimulation, Extinction, Psychological, Face, Fear, Female, Hippocampus, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Memory, Nerve Net, Neural Pathways, Prefrontal Cortex