Abstract

This article reviews the articles in this issue that describe the strategies derived from the inhibitory learning model as applied to exposure therapy for anxiety disorders. The major principles of inhibitory learning are to create and strengthen nonthreat associations in memory (largely by engaging prefrontal cortical regions), and to effectively retrieve those nonthreat associations in the long term. Several case vignettes are provided that demonstrate how the principles of inhibitory learning (which include maximizing expectancy violations, limiting distraction, fear antagonistic actions, deepened extinction, elimination of safety behaviors, occasional reinforced extinction, increasing variability of exposures and offsetting reinstatement and context renewal effects) can be applied in clinical practice.

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