Publication | Closed Access
Electrical Stimulation of Medial Prefrontal Cortex Reduces Conditioned Fear in a Temporally Specific Manner.
353
Citations
41
References
2004
Year
Auditory ImageryNeuropsychologyBrain MechanismInhibitory ProcessAffective NeuroscienceAuditory FearSocial SciencesPsychophysiologyCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceElectrical StimulationPsychiatryNervous SystemNeurobiological MechanismTone OnsetNeurophysiologyAnticipatory ProcessNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryCentral Nervous SystemTemporally Specific MannerMedicine
The authors recently showed that extinction of auditory fear conditioning leads to potentiation of tone-evoked activity of neurons in the infralimbic (IL) subregion of the medial prefrontal cortex, suggesting that IL inhibits fear after extinction (M. R. Milad, & G. J. Quirk, 2002). In support of this finding, pairing conditioned tones with brief (300-ms) electrical stimulation of IL reduces conditioned freezing. The present study showed that IL stimulation inhibits freezing if given 0.1 s after tone onset (the latency of tone-evoked responses) but has no effect if given either 1 s before or 1 s after tone onset. This suggests that IL gates the response of downstream structures such as the amygdala to fear stimuli.
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