Pavlovian threat conditioning can generate intrusive memories that persist over time
Pavlovian threat conditioning can generate intrusive memories that persist over time
Although Pavlovian threat conditioning has proven to be a useful translational model for the development of anxiety disorders, it remains unknown if this procedure can generate intrusive memories – a symptom of many anxiety-related disorders, and whether intrusions persist over time. Social support has been related to better adjustment after trauma however, experimental evidence regarding its effect on the development of anxiety-related symptoms is sparse. We had two aims: to test whether threat conditioning generates intrusive memories, and whether different social support interactions impacted expression of emotional memories. Non-clinical participants (n = 81) underwent threat conditioning to neutral stimuli. Participants were then assigned to a supportive, unsupportive, or no social interaction group, and asked to report intrusive memories for seven days. As predicted, threat conditioning can generate intrusions, with greater number of intrusions of CS+ (M = 2.35, SD = 3.09) than CS- (M = 1.39, SD = 2.17). Contrary to predictions, compared to no social interaction, supportive social interaction did not reduce, and unsupportive interaction did not increase skin conductance of learned threat or number of intrusions. Unsupportive interaction resulted in a relative difference in number of intrusions to CS + vs CS-, suggesting that unsupportive interaction might have increased image-based threat memories. Intrusions were still measurable one year after conditioning (one-year follow-up; n = 54), when individuals with higher trait anxiety and greater number of previous trauma experiences reported more intrusions. Our findings show that threat conditioning can create long-lasting intrusions, offering a novel experimental psychopathology model of intrusive memories with implications for both research on learning and clinical applications.
Espinosa, Lisa
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Bonsall, Michael B.
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Becker, Nina
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Holmes, Emily A.
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Olsson, Andreas
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3 August 2022
Espinosa, Lisa
a085958c-70b2-42b5-b1b3-3f9297e1171f
Bonsall, Michael B.
d0b21c0f-ede4-40e9-91a2-4fe41a06d3c6
Becker, Nina
5dbac433-0b1f-4b91-849e-741e9d679c4b
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Olsson, Andreas
4b80d27e-5e76-47a4-ab36-cfb7835b63e4
Espinosa, Lisa, Bonsall, Michael B., Becker, Nina, Holmes, Emily A. and Olsson, Andreas
(2022)
Pavlovian threat conditioning can generate intrusive memories that persist over time.
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 157, [104161].
(doi:10.1016/j.brat.2022.104161).
Abstract
Although Pavlovian threat conditioning has proven to be a useful translational model for the development of anxiety disorders, it remains unknown if this procedure can generate intrusive memories – a symptom of many anxiety-related disorders, and whether intrusions persist over time. Social support has been related to better adjustment after trauma however, experimental evidence regarding its effect on the development of anxiety-related symptoms is sparse. We had two aims: to test whether threat conditioning generates intrusive memories, and whether different social support interactions impacted expression of emotional memories. Non-clinical participants (n = 81) underwent threat conditioning to neutral stimuli. Participants were then assigned to a supportive, unsupportive, or no social interaction group, and asked to report intrusive memories for seven days. As predicted, threat conditioning can generate intrusions, with greater number of intrusions of CS+ (M = 2.35, SD = 3.09) than CS- (M = 1.39, SD = 2.17). Contrary to predictions, compared to no social interaction, supportive social interaction did not reduce, and unsupportive interaction did not increase skin conductance of learned threat or number of intrusions. Unsupportive interaction resulted in a relative difference in number of intrusions to CS + vs CS-, suggesting that unsupportive interaction might have increased image-based threat memories. Intrusions were still measurable one year after conditioning (one-year follow-up; n = 54), when individuals with higher trait anxiety and greater number of previous trauma experiences reported more intrusions. Our findings show that threat conditioning can create long-lasting intrusions, offering a novel experimental psychopathology model of intrusive memories with implications for both research on learning and clinical applications.
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 July 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 July 2022
Published date: 3 August 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 508027
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508027
ISSN: 0005-7967
PURE UUID: 331ffb4c-faf5-4b47-9821-0d599c748737
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Date deposited: 09 Jan 2026 17:58
Last modified: 10 Jan 2026 05:08
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Author:
Lisa Espinosa
Author:
Michael B. Bonsall
Author:
Nina Becker
Author:
Emily A. Holmes
Author:
Andreas Olsson
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