Abstract

Respiratory physiology is influenced by cognitive processes. It has been suggested that some cognitive states may be inferred from respiration amplitude responses (RAR) after external events. Here, we investigate whether RAR allow assessment of fear memory in cued fear conditioning, an experimental model of aversive learning. To this end, we built on a previously developed psychophysiological model (PsPM) of RAR, which regards interpolated RAR time series as the output of a linear time invariant system. We first establish that average RAR after CS+ and CS− are different. We then develop the response function of fear‐conditioned RAR, to be used in our PsPM. This PsPM is inverted to yield estimates of cognitive input into the respiratory system. We analyze five validation experiments involving fear acquisition and retention, delay and trace conditioning, short and medium CS‐US intervals, and data acquired with bellows and MRI‐compatible pressure chest belts. In all experiments, CS+ and CS− are distinguished by their estimated cognitive inputs, and the sensitivity of this distinction is higher for model‐based estimates than for peak scoring of RAR. Comparing these data with skin conductance responses (SCR) and heart period responses (HPR), we find that, on average, RAR performs similar to SCR in distinguishing CS+ and CS−, but is less sensitive than HPR. Overall, our work provides a novel and robust tool to investigate fear memory in humans that may allow wide and straightforward application to diverse experimental contexts.

Highlights

  • Respiratory physiology is influenced by cognitive processes

  • We contrasted the response to CS1 and CS2 in two established psychophysiological measures: skin conductance responses (SCR) and heart period responses (HPR)

  • We found that SCR and HPR significantly discriminated CS1/CS2 in all experiments (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Respiratory physiology is influenced by cognitive processes. It has been suggested that some cognitive states may be inferred from respiration amplitude responses (RAR) after external events. We investigate whether RAR allow assessment of fear memory in cued fear conditioning, an experimental model of aversive learning. Cued fear conditioning is an experimental paradigm commonly employed in the study of animal and human aversive memory. We have recently shown that respiration amplitude responses (RAR) may be better suited to distinguish cognitive processes than respiration period (Bach et al, 2016). This motivates our current study in which we consider a possibility that conditioned changes in RAR may allow assessing fear memory. Our method could be applicable to a large number of existing experimental setups

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