4.6 Article

Fear conditioning depends on the nature of the unconditional stimulus and may be related to hair levels of endocannabinoids

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.14297

Keywords

electrodermal responding; endocannabinoids; fear conditioning; replicability

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The replicability of fear conditioning research has been questioned due to the use of differing materials and methods. This study aimed to compare fear acquisition, extinction, and return of fear using different unconditional stimuli (shock, scream, or combination) and to investigate the relationship between fear conditioning and hair endocannabinoid levels. The results showed that skin conductance responses were significantly lower for stimuli paired with a scream compared to a shock, and reducing the predictability of the unconditional stimulus affected habituation of skin conductance responses. Hair endocannabinoids were associated with physiological arousal during fear conditioning and higher return of fear to threat cues.
The replicability of fear conditioning research has come under recent scrutiny, with increasing acknowledgment that the use of differing materials and methods may lead to incongruent results. Direct comparisons between the main two unconditional stimuli used in fear conditioning - an electric shock or a loud scream-are scarce, and yet these stimuli are usually used interchangeably. In the present study, we tested whether a scream, a shock, or an unpredictable combination of the two affected fear acquisition, extinction, and return of fear amongst healthy participants (N = 109, 81 female). We also collected hair samples and tested the relationship between fear conditioning and hair endocannabinoid levels. Our findings suggest that, although subjective ratings of pleasantness, arousal, and anxiety were similar regardless of the unconditional stimuli used, skin conductance responses were significantly lower for stimuli paired with the scream compared to a shock alone. Further, reducing the predictability of the unconditional stimulus reduced habituation of skin conductance responses during acquisition and reacquisition, but did not produce stronger conditioning compared to shock alone. Exploratory analyses suggested that hair endocannabinoids were associated with overall physiological arousal during fear conditioning, as well as higher return of fear to the threat cue, but not to the safety cue. These findings have multiple implications for the design and replicability of fear conditioning research and provide the first evidence for an association between hair levels of endocannabinoids and human fear conditioning.

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