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N. G. CURLEY1, S. A. STERN2, J. S. SCHWARTZ1, C. K. CAIN2, D.
SCHILLER1,2, J. E. LEDOUX2, E. A. PHELPS1,2; Fear extinction is a process by which learned fear responses are no longer
expressed after repeated exposure to the conditioned stimuli with no aversive
consequences. Research has suggested that this process is due to the inhibition
rather than the erasure of the fear association. This suggestion is based
on evidence showing that extinguished fear responses reemerge with the
passage of time or with re-exposure to the unconditioned stimulus in the
original context. However, recent studies in rats have shown that when
extinction was conducted immediately after acquisition, the conditioned
fear responses were unable to be recovered, suggesting that the fear association
was erased (Myers et al., 2006). Support Contributed By: James S. McDonnell Foundation NIH NRSA F32MH077458-02
Program No. 426.22/III13 |
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