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Perceiving threat in the face of safety: excitation and inhibition of conditioned fear in human visual cortex.
J Neurosci. 2013 Jan 02; 33(1):72-8.JN

Abstract

Previous findings have established that cortical sensory systems exhibit experience-dependent biases toward stimuli consistently associated with threat. It remains unclear whether safety cues also facilitate perceptual engagement or how competition between learned threat and safety cues is resolved within visual cortex. Here, we used classical discrimination conditioning with simple luminance modulated visual stimuli that predicted the presence or absence of an aversive sound to examine visuocortical competition between features signaling threat versus safety. We tracked steady-state visual evoked potentials to label distinct visual cortical responses in humans to conditioned and control stimuli. Trial-by-trial expectancy ratings collected online confirmed that participants discriminated between threat and safety cues. Conditioning was associated with heightened activation of the extended visual cortex in response to the threat, but not the safety, stimulus. Cortical facilitation for the threatening stimulus was selective and not decreased by simultaneously presenting safe and associatively novel cues. Our findings shed light on the sensory brain dynamics associated with experience-dependent acquisition of perceptual biases for danger and safety signals.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Center for the Study of Emotion and Attention, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA. vmiskovic@ufl.eduNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

23283323

Citation

Miskovic, Vladimir, and Andreas Keil. "Perceiving Threat in the Face of Safety: Excitation and Inhibition of Conditioned Fear in Human Visual Cortex." The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience, vol. 33, no. 1, 2013, pp. 72-8.
Miskovic V, Keil A. Perceiving threat in the face of safety: excitation and inhibition of conditioned fear in human visual cortex. J Neurosci. 2013;33(1):72-8.
Miskovic, V., & Keil, A. (2013). Perceiving threat in the face of safety: excitation and inhibition of conditioned fear in human visual cortex. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 33(1), 72-8. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3692-12.2013
Miskovic V, Keil A. Perceiving Threat in the Face of Safety: Excitation and Inhibition of Conditioned Fear in Human Visual Cortex. J Neurosci. 2013 Jan 2;33(1):72-8. PubMed PMID: 23283323.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Perceiving threat in the face of safety: excitation and inhibition of conditioned fear in human visual cortex. AU - Miskovic,Vladimir, AU - Keil,Andreas, PY - 2013/1/4/entrez PY - 2013/1/4/pubmed PY - 2013/3/13/medline SP - 72 EP - 8 JF - The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience JO - J Neurosci VL - 33 IS - 1 N2 - Previous findings have established that cortical sensory systems exhibit experience-dependent biases toward stimuli consistently associated with threat. It remains unclear whether safety cues also facilitate perceptual engagement or how competition between learned threat and safety cues is resolved within visual cortex. Here, we used classical discrimination conditioning with simple luminance modulated visual stimuli that predicted the presence or absence of an aversive sound to examine visuocortical competition between features signaling threat versus safety. We tracked steady-state visual evoked potentials to label distinct visual cortical responses in humans to conditioned and control stimuli. Trial-by-trial expectancy ratings collected online confirmed that participants discriminated between threat and safety cues. Conditioning was associated with heightened activation of the extended visual cortex in response to the threat, but not the safety, stimulus. Cortical facilitation for the threatening stimulus was selective and not decreased by simultaneously presenting safe and associatively novel cues. Our findings shed light on the sensory brain dynamics associated with experience-dependent acquisition of perceptual biases for danger and safety signals. SN - 1529-2401 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/23283323/Perceiving_threat_in_the_face_of_safety:_excitation_and_inhibition_of_conditioned_fear_in_human_visual_cortex_ L2 - http://www.jneurosci.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=23283323 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -