Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
917924 Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Little is known about the development of fear generalization processes in middle childhood.•Developmental changes in fear learning and fear generalization were assessed with a novel task in 5–10-year old children.•Older children showed better discrimination and memory during extinction recall than younger children.

The current study examined developmental changes in fear learning and generalization in 54 healthy 5–10-year old children using a novel fear conditioning paradigm. In this task, the conditioned stimuli (CS+/CS−) were two blue and yellow colored cartoon bells, and the unconditioned stimulus was an unpleasant loud alarm sound presented with a red cartoon bell. Physiological and subjective data were acquired. Three weeks after conditioning, 48 of these participants viewed the CS−, CS+, and morphed images resembling the CS+. Participants made threat–safety discriminations while appraising threat and remembering the CS+. Although no age-related differences in fear learning emerged, patterns of generalization were qualified by child age. Older children demonstrated better discrimination between the CS+ and CS morphs than younger age groups and also reported more fear to stimuli resembling the CS+ than younger children. Clinical implications and future directions are discussed.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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