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Fear conditioning following a unilateral anterior temporal lobectomy: reduced autonomic responding and stimulus contingency knowledge.
Acta Neurol Belg. 2010 Mar; 110(1):36-48.AN

Abstract

Animal research demonstrated that during fear conditioning the amygdala plays a central role in forming an association between the conditioned stimulus (CS) and the unconditioned stimulus (US). Lesion studies conducted in patients who underwent a unilateral anterior temporal lobe resection, however; yielded contradictory findings. To date, it remains unclear whether amygdala damage only affects fear-conditioned startle responding or impairs both the latter and fear-conditioned skin conductance responding (SCR). Moreover inconsistency exists regarding the preservation of contingency knowledge in amygdala-damaged patients. In the current study, a differential fear conditioning task was presented to a unilaterally amygdala-damaged patient group and a healthy control group, recording fear-potentiated startle responses along with SCRs. Retrospectively, the valence of the CSs and contingency awareness was assessed. Unlike the control group, unilaterally amygdala-damaged patients showed neither in their SCRs nor in their valence ratings an effect of fear conditioning. The startle data, however, yielded in none of the two test groups fear-conditioned responding. Finally, considerably fewer patients (37.5%) than controls (95%) acquired correct memory of the presented contingency. Based on these findings we concluded that the fear conditioning impairment in amygdala-damaged patients was not restricted to SCRs, but also affected valence ratings and memory of the presented contingency. A broader theory of the amygdala as relevance detector is proposed in order to account for the diverse neurological findings obtained so far.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Psychology, University of Leuven, Belgium. Evelien.Coppens@psy.kuleuven.beNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

20514925

Citation

Coppens, Evelien, et al. "Fear Conditioning Following a Unilateral Anterior Temporal Lobectomy: Reduced Autonomic Responding and Stimulus Contingency Knowledge." Acta Neurologica Belgica, vol. 110, no. 1, 2010, pp. 36-48.
Coppens E, van Paesschen W, Vandenbulcke M, et al. Fear conditioning following a unilateral anterior temporal lobectomy: reduced autonomic responding and stimulus contingency knowledge. Acta Neurol Belg. 2010;110(1):36-48.
Coppens, E., van Paesschen, W., Vandenbulcke, M., & Vansteenwegen, D. (2010). Fear conditioning following a unilateral anterior temporal lobectomy: reduced autonomic responding and stimulus contingency knowledge. Acta Neurologica Belgica, 110(1), 36-48.
Coppens E, et al. Fear Conditioning Following a Unilateral Anterior Temporal Lobectomy: Reduced Autonomic Responding and Stimulus Contingency Knowledge. Acta Neurol Belg. 2010;110(1):36-48. PubMed PMID: 20514925.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Fear conditioning following a unilateral anterior temporal lobectomy: reduced autonomic responding and stimulus contingency knowledge. AU - Coppens,Evelien, AU - van Paesschen,Wim, AU - Vandenbulcke,Mathieu, AU - Vansteenwegen,Debora, PY - 2010/6/3/entrez PY - 2010/6/3/pubmed PY - 2010/6/23/medline SP - 36 EP - 48 JF - Acta neurologica Belgica JO - Acta Neurol Belg VL - 110 IS - 1 N2 - Animal research demonstrated that during fear conditioning the amygdala plays a central role in forming an association between the conditioned stimulus (CS) and the unconditioned stimulus (US). Lesion studies conducted in patients who underwent a unilateral anterior temporal lobe resection, however; yielded contradictory findings. To date, it remains unclear whether amygdala damage only affects fear-conditioned startle responding or impairs both the latter and fear-conditioned skin conductance responding (SCR). Moreover inconsistency exists regarding the preservation of contingency knowledge in amygdala-damaged patients. In the current study, a differential fear conditioning task was presented to a unilaterally amygdala-damaged patient group and a healthy control group, recording fear-potentiated startle responses along with SCRs. Retrospectively, the valence of the CSs and contingency awareness was assessed. Unlike the control group, unilaterally amygdala-damaged patients showed neither in their SCRs nor in their valence ratings an effect of fear conditioning. The startle data, however, yielded in none of the two test groups fear-conditioned responding. Finally, considerably fewer patients (37.5%) than controls (95%) acquired correct memory of the presented contingency. Based on these findings we concluded that the fear conditioning impairment in amygdala-damaged patients was not restricted to SCRs, but also affected valence ratings and memory of the presented contingency. A broader theory of the amygdala as relevance detector is proposed in order to account for the diverse neurological findings obtained so far. SN - 0300-9009 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/20514925/Fear_conditioning_following_a_unilateral_anterior_temporal_lobectomy:_reduced_autonomic_responding_and_stimulus_contingency_knowledge_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -