The role of hippocampal spatial representations in contextualization and generalization of fear
Publication year
2020Author(s)
Number of pages
11 p.
Source
NeuroImage, 206, (2020), pp. 1-11, article 116308ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

Display more detailsDisplay less details
Organization
Cognitive Neuroscience
PI Group Affective Neuroscience
SW OZ BSI KLP
Neurology
PI Group Systems Neurology
PI Group Memory & Emotion
PI Group Memory & Space
Neuroinformatics
Journal title
NeuroImage
Volume
vol. 206
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 1
Page end
p. 11
Subject
120 Memory and Space; 130 000 Cognitive Neurology & Memory; 230 Affective Neuroscience; 240 Systems Neurology; Experimental Psychopathology and Treatment; Neuroinformatics; Radboudumc 13: Stress-related disorders DCMN: Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience; Radboudumc 3: Disorders of movement DCMN: Donders Center for Medical NeuroscienceAbstract
Using contextual information to predict aversive events is a critical ability that protects from generalizing fear responses to safe contexts. Animal models have demonstrated the importance of spatial context representations within the hippocampal formation in contextualization of fear learning. The ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is known to play an important role in safety learning, possibly also through the incorporation of context information. However, if contextual representations are related to context-dependent expression of fear memory in humans remains unclear. Twenty-one healthy participants underwent functional MRI combined with a cue-context conditioning paradigm within a self-navigated virtual reality environment. The environment included two buildings (Threat and Safe context), which had distinct features outside but were identical inside. Within each context, participants saw two cues (CS+, CS-). The CS+ was consistently (100% reinforcement rate) paired with an electric shock in the Threat context, but never in the Safe context. The CS- was never paired with a shock. We found robust differential skin conductance responses (SCRs; CS+ > CS-) in the Threat context, but also within the Safe context, indicating fear generalization. Within the Safe context, vmPFC responses to the CS+ were larger than those in the Threat context. We furthermore found environment-specific representations for the two contexts in the training paradigm (i.e., before conditioning took place) in the hippocampus to be related to fear expression and generalization. Namely, participants with a weak context representation (z-score < 1.65) showed stronger fear generalization compared to participants with a strong context representation (z-score > 1.65). Thus, a weak neural representation strength of spatial context may explain overgeneralization of memory to safe contexts. In addition, our findings demonstrate that context-dependent regulation of fear expression engages ventromedial prefrontal pathways suggesting this involves a similar mechanism that is known to be involved in retrieval of extinction memory.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [234316]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3718]
- Electronic publications [117285]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [89180]
- Faculty of Science [34568]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [29199]
- Open Access publications [84288]
Upload full text
Use your RU credentials (u/z-number and password) to log in with SURFconext to upload a file for processing by the repository team.