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Background: Considerable research has revealed impaired fear extinction to be a significant predictor of PTSD. Fear extinction is also considered the primary mechanism of exposure therapy, and a critical factor in PTSD recovery. The cognitive theory of PTSD proposes that symptoms persist due to excessive negative appraisals about the trauma and its sequelae. Research has not yet examined the relationship between fear extinction and negative appraisals in PTSD.
Methods: A cross-sectional sample of participants with PTSD (n =21), and trauma-exposed controls (n =33) underwent a standardized differential fear conditioning and extinction paradigm, with skin conductance response (SCR) amplitude serving as the index of conditioned responses. The Posttraumatic Cognitions Inventory (PTCI) was used to index catastrophic negative appraisals.
Results: Participants with PTSD demonstrated a slower decrease in overall SCR responses during extinction and greater negative appraisals compared to the group. A moderation analysis revealed that both negative trauma-relevant appraisals and fear extinction learning were independently associated with PTSD symptoms, but there was no moderation interaction.
Limitations: The current study was limited by a modest sample size, leading to the inclusion of participants with subclinical PTSD symptoms. Further, the current study only assessed fear extinction learning; including a second day extinction recall task may show alternative effects.
Conclusions: These findings indicate that negative appraisals and fear extinction did not interact, but had independent relationships with PTSD symptoms. Here we show for the first time in an experimental framework that negative appraisals and fear extinction play separate roles in PTSD symptoms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2017.04.016 | DOI Listing |
Dev Psychobiol
September 2025
Department of Psychology and Center for Neuroscience and Behavior, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, USA.
Social buffering may reduce the persistent impacts of acute early life stress (aELS) and, thus, has important implications for anxiety- and trauma-related disorders. First, we assessed whether aELS would induce maladaptive fear incubation in adult mice, a PTSD-like phenotype. Overall, animals showed incubation of fear memory in adulthood, independent of aELS condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Psychobiol
September 2025
School of Psychology, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Adolescent male rodents and humans exhibit impairments in extinguishing learned fear. Here, we investigated whether female adolescent rats exhibit such impairments and if extinction is affected by the estrous cycle as in adults. Following fear conditioning to a discrete cue, female adolescent Sprague Dawley rats were extinguished either around the onset of puberty, when estrous cycling begins, or across different stages of the estrous cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Hum Behav
September 2025
Department of Neuropsychology, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry
September 2025
Institut de Neurociències, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM), Madrid, Spain; Unitat de Neurociència Traslacional, Parc Taulí Hospital Universitari, Institut d'Investigació i Innovació Parc Taulí (I3PT), S
The appearance of long-lasting behavioral alterations is considered critical for the characterization of acute stressors as putative animal models of PTSD. However, the traumatic nature of the different stressors used is objectively difficult to demonstrate and literature is plagued by inconsistent results. In the present study we wanted to demonstrate the relevance of qualitative aspects of stressors not linked to their severity (as evaluated by classical biological markers) and how the use of different mouse or rat strains can contribute to the inconsistencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehav Res Ther
September 2025
Mental Health Research and Treatment Center (FBZ), Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, Massenbergstr. 9-13, 44787, Bochum, Germany; German Center for Mental Health (DZPG), Partner Site Bochum-Marburg, Massenbergstr. 9-13, 44787, Bochum, Germany. Electronic address:
Anxiety disorders are the most prevalent mental health problems in childhood and adolescence, highlighting the importance to study their underlying mechanisms. One key process in fear reduction, particularly in exposure-based cognitive behavioral therapy, is extinction learning. While extensively studied in adults, its role in youth remains underexplored.
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