Abstract

Reconsolidation is the post-retrieval stabilization of memories, a time-limited process during which reactivated (i.e., retrieved) memories can be updated with new information, become stronger or weaker, depending on the specific treatment. We have previously shown that the stress hormone cortisol has an enhancing effect on the reconsolidation of fear memories in men. This effect was specific, i.e., limited to the conditioned stimulus (CS) that was reactivated, and did not generalize to other previously reinforced, but not reactivated CS. Based on these results, we suggested that cortisol plays a critical role in the continuous strengthening of reactivated emotional memories, contributing to their persistence and robustness. In the current study, we aimed to achieve a more generalized reconsolidation enhancement using an alternative reactivation method, i.e., by a low-intensity unconditioned stimulus (UCS) presentation instead of the more common unreinforced CS presentation. In previous studies, UCS reactivation was shown to lead to a more generalized reconsolidation effect. Therefore, we hypothesized that the combination of cortisol treatment and UCS reactivation would lead to an enhanced fear memory reconsolidation, which would generalize from previously reinforced CS to stimuli that resemble it. We tested 75 men in a 3-day fear conditioning paradigm: fear acquisition training on day 1; UCS reactivation/no reactivation and pharmacological treatment (20 mg hydrocortisone/placebo) on day 2; extinction training, reinstatement and test (of original and modified stimuli) on day 3. In contrast to our hypothesis, UCS reactivation prevented the return of fear [observed in skin conductance responses (SCR)] regardless of the pharmacological manipulation: while reinstatement to the original CS was found in the no-reactivation group, both reactivation groups (cortisol and placebo) showed no reinstatement. As the only methodological difference between our previous study and the current one was the reactivation method, we focus on UCS reactivation as the main explanation for these unexpected findings. We suggest that the robust prediction error generated by the UCS reactivation method (as opposed to CS reactivation), combined with the lower UCS intensity, has by itself weakened the emotional value of the UCS, thus preventing the return of fear to the CS that was associated with it. We call for future research to support these findings and to examine the potential of this reactivation method, or variations thereof, as a tool for therapeutic use.

Highlights

  • In the late 1960s, Misanin et al (1968) discovered that alreadyconsolidated memories could once again become susceptible to interruption after their retrieval

  • We aimed to extend our previous findings on the enhancing effects of cortisol on the reconsolidation of fear memories in men (Meir Drexler et al, 2015) by creating a more generalized reconsolidation effect

  • The following participants were excluded from the skin conductance responses (SCR) analyses due to missing data or technical failure: in extinction analysis, one participant from the reactivation + cortisol (RE+CORT) group; in reinstatement test analysis, one participant from the reactivation + placebo (RE)+CORT group and one participant from the CORT group

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Summary

Introduction

In the late 1960s, Misanin et al (1968) discovered that alreadyconsolidated memories could once again become susceptible to interruption after their retrieval. This finding stood in contrast to the dominant view on memory at that time, according to which memory consolidation is a one-time process. Since maladaptive learning and memory processes underlie various psychological disorders (e.g., posttraumatic stress disorder, specific phobias, and addictions; Coles and Heimberg, 2002; Hyman et al, 2006), the increasing knowledge on memory reconsolidation can significantly contribute to the understating and treatment of these disorders (Soeter and Kindt, 2015; Kindt and van Emmerik, 2016; Elsey and Kindt, 2017; Meir Drexler and Wolf, 2018). The current study, aimed to reveal the role of cortisol in the strengthening and generalization of reactivated emotional memories

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