Abstract
Safety has been defined as the absence of threat and stimuli never
associated with an aversive event (unconditioned stimulus, US) can
inhibit conditioned defensive responses. Relief is a positive response
elicited by the termination of an aversive US and stimuli presented upon
the moment of relief elicit appetitive conditioned responses. Unclear
remains whether the threat absence and threat termination share
inhibitory mechanisms or rather these two types of safety are distinct.
Fifty-eight participants learned that one stimulus (forward CS+) was
shortly presented before a mildly painful electric stimulation (US), one
stimulus (backward CS+) was presented shortly after the US, and one
stimulus (CS-) was never associated with the US. During a summation
test, forward CS+ was presented in compound with either the backward CS+
or the CS-. Conditioned defensive responses were successfully acquired
on both verbal and physiological responses meaning that forward CS+
compared to both CS- and backward CS+ was rated more aversive and
elicited stronger physiological responses. During summation test,
conditioned physiological defensive responses were significantly and
comparably attenuated by both backward CS+ and CS-, but inhibition of
startle potentiation by the relief-associated stimulus was not evident
during the early test trials. In summary, conditioned defensive
responses can be inhibited by signals of threat absence (CS-) and threat
termination (backward CS+). However, the underlying mechanisms of these
two signals may differ.