Selectivity of conditioned fear of touch is modulated by somatosensory precision

Date

2016

Authors

Harvie, D.
Meulders, A.
Reid, E.
Camfferman, D.
Brinkworth, R.
Moseley, G.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Psychophysiology, 2016; 53(6):921-929

Statement of Responsibility

Daniel S. Harvie, Ann Meulders, Emily Reid, Danny Camfferman, Russell S.A. Brinkworth and G. Lorimer Moseley

Conference Name

Abstract

Learning to initiate defenses in response to specific signals of danger is adaptive. Some chronic pain conditions, however, are characterized by widespread anxiety, avoidance, and pain consistent with a loss of defensive response specificity. Response specificity depends on ability to discriminate between safe and threatening stimuli; therefore, specificity might depend on sensory precision. This would help explain the high prevalence of chronic pain in body areas of low tactile acuity, such as the lower back, and clarify why improving sensory precision may reduce chronic pain. We compared the acquisition and generalization of fear of pain-associated vibrotactile stimuli delivered to either the hand (high tactile acuity) or the back (low tactile acuity). During acquisition, tactile stimulation at one location (CS+) predicted the noxious electrocutaneous stimulation (US), while tactile stimulation at another location (CS-) did not. Responses to three stimuli with decreasing spatial proximity to the CS+ (generalizing stimuli; GS1-3) were tested. Differential learning and generalization were compared between groups. The main outcome of fear-potentiated startle responses showed differential learning only in the hand group. Self-reported fear and expectancy confirmed differential learning and limited generalization in the hand group, and suggested undifferentiated fear and expectancy in the back group. Differences in generalization could not be inferred from the startle data. Specificity of fear responses appears to be affected by somatosensory precision. This has implications for our understanding of the role of sensory imprecision in the development of chronic pain.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

© 2016 Society for Psychophysiological Research

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record