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Revealed: Why fear is the key

Last updated on: July 9, 2009 
Denis Sinyakov/Reuters

In a landmark research, neuroscientists have located the neurons responsible for fear conditioning in the mammalian brain, a development that will facilitate better understanding and treatment for human phobias and anxiety disorders.

Researchers at the University of Washington used an imaging technique, which enabled them to trace the process of neural activation in the brains of rats, to pinpoint the basolateral nucleus in the region of the brain, called the amygdala, as the place where fear conditioning is encoded.

Revealed: Why fear is the key

Last updated on: July 9, 2009 
An unidentified woman hostage is held by a robber inside a bank branch

Fear conditioning is a form of Pavlovian, or associative, learning and is considered to be a model system for understanding human phobias, post-traumatic stress disorder and other anxiety disorders.

Based on the study of rats, the research was designed to look for where information about conditioned and unconditioned stimuli converges in the brain as fear memories are formed.

Revealed: Why fear is the key

Last updated on: July 9, 2009 
Preschooler Aleeya Amran, 6, refuses to attend class during her first day of school
'By understanding the process of fear conditioning we might learn how to treat anxiety by making the conditioning weaker or to go away. It is also a tool for learning about these brain cells and the underlying mechanism of fear conditioning,' said Ilene Bernstein, author of the new study, which is published in the latest issue of PLoS One journal.

Bernstein, a professor of psychology at the University of Washington, said people have phobias that often are set off by cues from something bad that happened to them, such as being scared by a snake or being in a dark alley. 'So they develop an anxiety disorder,' she said.

Revealed: Why fear is the key

Last updated on: July 9, 2009 
An Iraqi soldier passes a woman during a military operation in Baghdad's al-Fadhil district
Neuroscientists previously suspected that both the amygdala and another brain region, the dorsal hippocampus, were where cues get associated when fear memories are formed, the Science Daily reported.

However, the latest study research suggests that the role of the hippocampus is to process and transmit information about conditioned stimuli to the amygdala, Bernstein said.

Revealed: Why fear is the key

Last updated on: July 9, 2009 
Local residents react near the scene of a rocket attack in the southern Israeli town of Sderot

She said by understanding the process of fear conditioning 'we might learn how to treat anxiety by making the conditioning weaker or to go away'.

'It is also a tool for learning about these brain cells and the underlying mechanism of fear conditioning,' Bernstein underlined.