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A discriminated conditioned punishment model of phobia

Authors :
Bloom CM
Post RJ
Mazick J
Blumenthal B
Doyle C
Peters B
Dyche J
Davenport DG
Source :
Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment, Vol 2013, Iss default, Pp 1239-1248 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Dove Medical Press, 2013.

Abstract

Christopher M Bloom,1 Ryan J Post,1 Joshua Mazick,1 Brittany Blumenthal,1 Caroline Doyle,1 Brenna Peters,1 Jeff Dyche,2 D Gene Davenport3 1Providence College, Providence, RI, USA; 2James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA, USA; 3Saint Louis University, St Louis, MO, USA Abstract: Traditionally, the signaled avoidance (SA) paradigm has been used in an attempt to better understand human phobia. Animal models of this type have been criticized for ineffectively representing phobia. The SA model characterizes phobia as an avoidance behavior by presenting environmental cues, which act as warning signals to an aversive stimulus (ie, shock). Discriminated conditioned punishment (DCP) is an alternative paradigm that characterizes phobia as a choice behavior in which fear serves to punish an otherwise adaptive behavior. The present study quantifies the differences between the paradigms and suggests that DCP offers an alternative paradigm for phobia. Rats trained on either SA or DCP were compared on a number of behavioral variables relevant to human phobia. Results indicate that rats in the DCP paradigm responded significantly earlier to warning signals and were more effective at preventing shocks than rats in the SA paradigm. Implications of this alternative paradigm are discussed. Keywords: animal models, avoidance, fear conditioning, anxiety disorders

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11766328 and 11782021
Volume :
2013
Issue :
default
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8bc18813e6374a35bd83358f0f40ba18
Document Type :
article