Center for Studies and Research in Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, University of Bologna, 40126 Bologna, Italy.
Center for Studies and Research in Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Psychology, University of Bologna, 40126 Bologna, Italy
J Neurosci. 2020 Oct 28;40(44):8491-8500. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0304-20.2020. Epub 2020 Oct 5.
The role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) in human pavlovian threat conditioning has been relegated largely to the extinction or reversal of previously acquired stimulus-outcome associations. However, recent neuroimaging evidence questions this view by also showing activity in the vmPFC during threat acquisition. Here we investigate the casual role of vmPFC in the acquisition of pavlovian threat conditioning by assessing skin conductance response (SCR) and declarative memory of stimulus-outcome contingencies during a differential pavlovian threat-conditioning paradigm in eight patients with a bilateral vmPFC lesion, 10 with a lesion outside PFC and 10 healthy participants (each group included both females and males). Results showed that patients with vmPFC lesion failed to produce a conditioned SCR during threat acquisition, despite no evidence of compromised SCR to unconditioned stimulus or compromised declarative memory for stimulus-outcome contingencies. These results suggest that the vmPFC plays a causal role in the acquisition of new learning and not just in the extinction or reversal of previously acquired learning, as previously thought. Given the role of the vmPFC in schema-related processing and latent structure learning, the vmPFC may be required to construct a detailed representation of the task, which is needed to produce a sustained conditioned physiological response in anticipation of the unconditioned stimulus during threat acquisition. Pavlovian threat conditioning is an adaptive mechanism through which organisms learn to avoid potential threats, thus increasing their chances of survival. Understanding what brain regions contribute to such a process is crucial to understand the mechanisms underlying adaptive as well as maladaptive learning, and has the potential to inform the treatment of anxiety disorders. Importantly, the role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) in the acquisition of pavlovian threat conditioning has been relegated largely to the inhibition of previously acquired learning. Here, we show that the vmPFC actually plays a causal role in the acquisition of pavlovian threat conditioning.
腹内侧前额叶皮层(vmPFC)在人类条件性恐惧反应中的作用主要局限于先前获得的刺激-结果关联的消退或反转。然而,最近的神经影像学证据对此观点提出了质疑,表明在威胁获得期间 vmPFC 也会活跃。在这里,我们通过评估在双侧 vmPFC 损伤的 8 名患者、非前额叶损伤的 10 名患者和 10 名健康参与者(每个组均包括女性和男性)在差异条件性恐惧反应范式中,皮肤电反应(SCR)和对刺激-结果关联的陈述性记忆,来研究 vmPFC 在条件性恐惧反应获得中的因果作用。结果表明,vmPFC 损伤的患者在威胁获得期间未能产生条件性 SCR,尽管他们对非条件刺激的 SCR 没有受损,对刺激-结果关联的陈述性记忆也没有受损。这些结果表明,vmPFC 在新学习的获得中起因果作用,而不仅仅是在先前获得的学习的消退或反转中起作用,如以前认为的那样。鉴于 vmPFC 在模式相关处理和潜在结构学习中的作用,vmPFC 可能需要构建任务的详细表示,以便在威胁获得期间对非条件刺激产生持续的条件生理反应。条件性恐惧反应是一种适应性机制,通过该机制,生物体学会避免潜在威胁,从而增加其生存机会。了解哪些大脑区域有助于这一过程对于理解适应性和非适应性学习的机制至关重要,并且有可能为焦虑障碍的治疗提供信息。重要的是,腹内侧前额叶皮层(vmPFC)在条件性恐惧反应的获得中的作用主要局限于对先前获得的学习的抑制。在这里,我们表明 vmPFC 实际上在条件性恐惧反应的获得中起因果作用。