The only evidence-based behavioral treatment for anxiety and stress-related disorders involves desensitization techniques that rely on principles of extinction learning. However, 40% of patients do not respond to this treatment. Efforts have focused on individual differences in treatment response, but have not examined when, during development, such treatments may be most effective. We examined fear-extinction learning across development in mice and humans. Parallel behavioral studies revealed attenuated extinction learning during adolescence. Probing neural circuitry in mice revealed altered synaptic plasticity of prefrontal cortical regions implicated in suppression of fear responses across development. The results suggest a lack of synaptic plasticity in the prefrontal regions, during adolescence, is associated with blunted regulation of fear extinction. These findings provide insight into optimizing treatment outcomes for when, during development, exposure therapies may be most effective. F ear learning is a highly adaptive, evolutionarily conserved process that allows one to respond appropriately to cues associated with danger. In the case of psychiatric disorders, however, fear may persist long after an environmental threat has passed. This unremitting and often debilitating form of fear is a core component of many anxiety disorders, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and involves exaggerated and inappropriate fear responses. Existing treatments, such as exposure therapy, are based on principles of fear extinction, during which cues previously associated with threat are presented in the absence of the initial aversive event until cues are considered safe and fear responses are reduced. Extinction-based exposure therapies have the strongest empirical evidence for benefitting adult patients suffering from PTSD (1), yet a comparative lack of knowledge about the development of fear neural circuitry prohibits similarly successful treatment outcomes in children and adolescents (2). Adolescence, in particular, is a developmental stage when the incidence of anxiety disorders peaks in humans (3-6), and it is estimated that over 75% of adults with fear-related disorders met diagnostic criteria as children and adolescents (7, 8). Because of insufficient or inaccurate diagnoses and a dearth of pediatric and adolescent specialized treatments, fewer than one in five children or adolescents are expected to receive treatment for their anxiety disorders (9), leaving a vast number with inadequate or no treatment (2, 10). The increased frequency of anxiety disorders in pediatric and adolescent populations highlights the importance of understanding neural mechanisms of fear regulation from a developmental perspective, as existing therapies directly rely upon principles of fear-extinction learning. Converging evidence from human and rodent studies suggests that insufficient top-down regulation of subcortical structures (11-14), such as the amygdala, may coincide with diminished prototypical extinction learning (15...
Negotiating the transition from dependence on parents to relative independence is not a unique demand for today’s youth, but has a long evolutionary history (transmission) and is shared across mammalian species (translation). Yet, behavioral changes observed during this period are often described as delinquent. This review examines changes in explorative and emotive behaviors during the transition into and out of adolescence and the underlying neurobiological bases in the context of adaptive and maladaptive functions.
Attention can enhance processing for relevant information and suppress this for ignored stimuli. However, some residual processing may still arise without attention. Here we presented overlapping outline objects at study, with subjects attending to those in one color but not the other. Attended objects were subsequently recognized on a surprise memory test, whereas there was complete amnesia for ignored items on such direct explicit testing; yet reliable behavioral priming effects were found on indirect testing. Event-related fMRI examined neural responses to previously attended or ignored objects, now shown alone in the same or mirror-reversed orientation as before, intermixed with new items. Repetition-related decreases in fMRI responses for objects previously attended and repeated in the same orientation were found in the right posterior fusiform, lateral occipital, and left inferior frontal cortex. More anterior fusiform regions also showed some repetition decreases for ignored objects, irrespective of orientation. View-specific repetition decreases were found in the striate cortex, particularly for previously attended items. In addition, previously ignored objects produced some fMRI response increases in the bilateral lingual gyri, relative to new objects. Selective attention at exposure can thus produce several distinct long-term effects on processing of stimuli repeated later, with neural response suppression stronger for previously attended objects, and some response enhancement for previously ignored objects, with these effects arising in different brain areas. Although repetition decreases may relate to positive priming phenomena, the repetition increases for ignored objects shown here for the first time might relate to processes that can produce "negative priming" in some behavioral studies. These results reveal quantitative and qualitative differences between neural substrates of long-term repetition effects for attended versus unattended objects.
Summary Adolescence reflects a period of increased rates of anxiety, depression and suicide. Yet most teens emerge from this period with a healthy, positive outcome. In this paper, we identify biological factors that may increase risk for some individuals during this developmental period by: 1) examining changes in neural circuitry underlying core phenotypic features of anxiety as healthy individuals transition into and out of adolescence; 2) examining genetic factors that may enhance risk for psychopathology in one individual over another using translation from mouse models to human neuroimaging and behavior; and 3) examining the effects of early experiences on core phenotypic features of anxiety using human neuroimaging and behavioral approaches. Each of these approaches alone provides only limited information on genetic and environmental influences on complex human behavior across development. Together, they reflect an emerging field of translational developmental neuroscience in forming important bridges between animal models of neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders.
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