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Adaptive contextualization: A new role for the default mode network in affective learning
Authors:Lars Marstaller  Hana Burianová  David C Reutens
Institution:1. Centre for Advanced Imaging, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia;2. School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom;3. Department of Psychology, Swansea University, Swansea, United Kingdom
Abstract:Safety learning describes the ability to learn that certain cues predict the absence of a dangerous or threatening event. Although incidental observations of activity within the default mode network (DMN) during the processing of safety cues have been reported previously, there is as yet no evidence demonstrating that the DMN plays a functional rather than a corollary role in safety learning. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and a Pavlovian fear conditioning and extinction paradigm, we investigated the neural correlates of danger and safety learning. Our results provide evidence for a functional role of the DMN by showing that (i) the DMN is activated by safety but not danger cues, (ii) the DMN is anti‐correlated with a fear‐processing network, and (iii) DMN activation increases with safety learning. Based on our results, we formulate a novel proposal, arguing that activity within the DMN supports the contextualization of safety memories, constrains the generalization of fear, and supports adaptive fear learning. Our findings have important implications for our understanding of affective and stress disorders, which are characterized by aberrant DMN activity, as they suggest that therapies targeting the DMN through mindfulness practice or brain stimulation might help prevent pathological over‐generalization of fear associations. Hum Brain Mapp 38:1082–1091, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:safety learning  generalization  context  fear  fMRI
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