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Learning biases to angry and happy faces during Pavlovian aversive conditioning.

Yoann Stussi, Gilles Pourtois, Andreas Olsson, David Sander

2020Emotion17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

= 107) showed that the conditioned response to angry and happy faces was more readily acquired and more resistant to extinction than the conditioned response to neutral faces. Strikingly, whereas the effects for angry faces were of moderate size, the conditioned response persistence to happy faces was of relatively small size and influenced by interindividual differences in their affective evaluation, as indexed by a Go/No-Go Association Task. Computational reinforcement learning analyses further suggested that angry faces were associated with a lower inhibitory learning rate than happy faces, thereby inducing a greater decrease in the impact of negative prediction error signals that contributed to weakening extinction learning. Altogether, these findings provide further evidence that the occurrence of learning biases in Pavlovian aversive conditioning is not specific to threat-related stimuli and depends on the stimulus' affective relevance to the organism. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyClassical conditioningExtinction (optical mineralogy)Aversive StimulusConditioningReinforcementCognitive psychologyStimulus (psychology)Developmental psychologyFear conditioningSocial psychologyNeuroscienceAmygdalaBiologyPaleontologyStatisticsMathematicsStress Responses and CortisolNeuroendocrine regulation and behaviorMemory and Neural Mechanisms