Flexibility of a Conditioned Response: Exploring the Limits of Attentional Capture By Fear
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University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Abstract
Recent work from the attention capture literature suggests that attention may be captured by stimuli with learned aversive value, even when these fear conditioned stimuli (CS) are task-irrelevant and not physically salient. Moreover, relatively little work in the human fear conditioning literature has investigated whether conditioned fear responses can flexibly transfer to a neutral associate of a CS. We examined, for the first time, whether fear-conditioned capture effects were able to transfer to the associate of a CS. Twenty-seven participants encoded novel scene-object pairs. Following encoding, scenes were presented alone during a conditioning phase. Scenes co-terminated with shock 100% (CS100), 50% (CS50), or 0% (CS0) of the time, depending on the object that they had been paired with during encoding, while participants made shock expectancy ratings. Subsequent to conditioning, participants performed a visual search task; the search display occasionally contained one of the encoded objects as a distractor. Eye movements were recorded. Results indicated that, during search, significantly more overt eye movements were made, in error, to the object associate of a CS relative to baseline distractors, and target-directed saccades on trials containing a CS associate were slower relative to target-directed saccades on baseline trials. However, there were no differences in capture effects across the three CS conditions (which varied in threat learning history), suggesting that fear-conditioned capture effects to a CS may not transfer to novel associates encountered for the first time in the episodic context of an experiment.