TY - JOUR PY - 2016// TI - Self-relevant threat contexts enhance early processing of fear-conditioned faces JO - Biological psychology A1 - Muench, Hannah M. A1 - Westermann, Stefan A1 - Pizzagalli, Diego A. A1 - Hofmann, Stefan G. A1 - Mueller, Erik M. SP - 194 EP - 202 VL - 121 IS - Pt B N2 - Anxiety states are characterized by attentional biases to threat and may show increased early brain responses to potentially threatening stimuli. How threatening stimuli are processed further depends on prior learning experiences (e.g. conditioning and extinction) and the context in which a stimulus appears. Whether context information and prior learning experiences interact with early threat processing in humans is unknown. Here, EEG was recorded while healthy participants (N=20) viewed faces that were fear-conditioned and/or extinguished 24h before. Faces were either passively viewed or presented within different contexts, which were created by describing scenarios that could either involve participants directly (self-threatening), or made them observers (other-threatening) of a potentially dangerous situation. Early brain responses (i.e., P1 amplitudes) were specifically enhanced during the self-threatening condition in response to non-extinguished versus extinguished fear-conditioned faces. This finding suggests that top-down contextual information is incorporated into early attention modulation of previously learned threat signals.

Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0301-0511 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsycho.2016.07.017 ID - ref1 ER -