Periodic Reporting for period 5 - ErasingFear (Understanding the Stability and Plasticity of Emotional Memory)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2024-01-01 al 2024-12-31
Why Research on Emotional Memory and Therapeutic Forgetting?
Anxiety Disorders are very common (60 million in Europe), so common that we almost forget the high burden of these disorders. The fears range from very broad anxieties to specific fears and phobias,
but also, specific fears (spider phobia, fear of dogs, heights or small spaces) are sometimes very complex and can be devastating and interfering with people’s daily life. Current pharmacological and psychological treatments for disorders of emotional memory only dampen the affective response while leaving the original fear memory intact. Under adverse circumstances, these original memories regain prominence, causing relapses in many patients. Disrupting the process of memory reconsolidation has the potential to fundamentally advance the treatment for fears and anxiety disorders.
The research project aimed to explore the stability and malleability of emotional memory to develop a revolutionary treatment for emotional memory disorders. The ultimate goal was to optimize reconsolidation-based interventions in clinical practice. To be more specific, the following objectives were addressed:
WP1: Demarcating the window of opportunity to change fear memory. We defined parameters for optimally triggering fear memory reconsolidation, and potential boundary conditions of the reconsolidation intervention.
WP2: Uncovering neural markers (Prediction Error) of extinction and memory reconsolidation. We defined the cognitive, physiological and computational aspects of prediction errors in fear learning to optimize interventions for fears and phobias.
WP3: Understanding the role of sleep in memory (re)consolidation and emotion regulation. We provided no convincing evidence that healthy sleep alone significantly alters emotional memory, which challenges existing models of sleep-dependent emotional processing and highlights the need to refine experimental paradigms in this realm of research.
WP4: Developing a reconsolidation intervention for emotional memory disorders. We have opened an outpatient clinic for phobias and anxiety disorders, where we use and further develop the memory reconsolidation intervention.
WP5: Investigating the paradoxical dissociation, yet interdependence, between the cognitive and emotional expression of fear memory. We have demonstrated that cognitive and emotional expressions of fear can function independently, yet remain intricately interwoven.
Clearly, this research has huge implications for the clinical field, with the possibility of novel and effective treatments requiring minimal time or cost. Inspired by the novel insights on how to change unduly intense fears, dr Kindt has established an outpatient clinic for phobias and anxiety disorders (Kindt Clinics https://kindtclinics.com/(si apre in una nuova finestra)) where she is the founder and scientific director. Kindt Clinics applies the scientific advancements of the ErasingFear project to treat individuals with severe fear and anxiety disorders, with 85% of clients overcoming their fear or phobia basically within one day.