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Brain structural connectivity and context‐dependent extinction memory
Author(s) -
Hermann Andrea,
Stark Rudolf,
Blecker Carlo R.,
Milad Mohammed R.,
Merz Christian J.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
hippocampus
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.767
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1098-1063
pISSN - 1050-9631
DOI - 10.1002/hipo.22738
Subject(s) - psychology , extinction (optical mineralogy) , neuroscience , context (archaeology) , uncinate fasciculus , amygdala , anxiety , cingulum (brain) , hippocampus , fear conditioning , recall , fractional anisotropy , white matter , cognitive psychology , magnetic resonance imaging , medicine , psychiatry , physics , biology , paleontology , radiology , optics
Abstract Background Extinction of conditioned fear represents an important mechanism in the treatment of anxiety disorders. Return of fear after successful extinction or exposure therapy in patients with anxiety disorders might be linked to poor temporal or contextual generalization of extinction due to individual differences in brain structural connectivity. The goal of this magnetic resonance imaging study was therefore to investigate the association of context‐dependent extinction recall with brain structural connectivity. Methods : Diffusion‐tensor imaging was used to determine the fractional anisotropy as a measure of white matter structural integrity of fiber tracts connecting central brain regions of the fear and extinction circuit (uncinate fasciculus, cingulum). Forty‐five healthy men participated in a two‐day fear conditioning experiment with fear acquisition in context A and extinction learning in context B on the first day. Extinction recall in the extinction context as well as renewal in the acquisition context and a novel context C took place one day later. Results : Renewal of conditioned fear (skin conductance responses) in the acquisition context was associated with higher structural integrity of the hippocampal part of the cingulum. Conclusions : Enhanced structural integrity of the cingulum might be related to stronger hippocampal modulation of the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, a region important for modulating conditioned fear output by excitatory projections to the amygdala. This finding underpins the crucial role of individual differences in the structural integrity of relevant fiber tracts for context‐dependent extinction recall and return of fear after exposure therapy in anxiety disorders.

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