Each of us has felt afraid, and we can all recognize fear in many animal species. Yet there is no consensus in the scientific study of fear. Some argue that ‘fear’ is a psychological construct rather than something discoverable through scientific investigation. Others argue that the term ‘fear’ cannot properly be applied to animals because we cannot know whether they feel afraid. Studies in rodents show that there are highly specific brain circuits for fear, whereas findings from human neuroimaging seem to make the opposite claim. Here, I review the field and urge three approaches that could reconcile the debates. For one, we need a broadly comparative approach that would identify core components of fear conserved across phyloge...
The ecology of fear concerns the population-, community-, and ecosystem-level consequences of the be...
Pavlovian conditioning paradigms have become important model systems for understand- ing the neurosc...
The study of “fear” can be traced back to the differences between “behaviorism” and “psychoanalysis”...
Each of us has felt afraid, and we can all recognize fear in many animal species. Yet there is no co...
There is disagreement on how best to define and investigate fear. Nature Neuroscience asked Dean Mob...
Do nonhuman animals (henceforth, animals) have emotions, and if so, are these similar to ours? This ...
The natural world presents a myriad of dangers that can threaten an organism's survival. This divers...
In The Deep History of Ourselves, Joseph LeDoux distinguishes between behavioral and physiological r...
Fear and anxiety are largely seen as separate entities, a distinction that inspires and shapes basic...
The past several decades has seen considerable progress in our understanding of the neurobiology of ...
Prey are relentlessly faced with a series of survival problems to solve. One enduring problem is pre...
That the fear and stress of life-threatening experiences can leave an indelible trace on the brain i...
Sarah N Garfinkel,1,2 Hugo D Critchley1,2 1Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science, 2Department of ...
I suggest some methods for data-collection and analysis that may help researchers infer fear from vi...
In the whole animal kingdom, fear learning is an essential process that allows living beings to surv...
The ecology of fear concerns the population-, community-, and ecosystem-level consequences of the be...
Pavlovian conditioning paradigms have become important model systems for understand- ing the neurosc...
The study of “fear” can be traced back to the differences between “behaviorism” and “psychoanalysis”...
Each of us has felt afraid, and we can all recognize fear in many animal species. Yet there is no co...
There is disagreement on how best to define and investigate fear. Nature Neuroscience asked Dean Mob...
Do nonhuman animals (henceforth, animals) have emotions, and if so, are these similar to ours? This ...
The natural world presents a myriad of dangers that can threaten an organism's survival. This divers...
In The Deep History of Ourselves, Joseph LeDoux distinguishes between behavioral and physiological r...
Fear and anxiety are largely seen as separate entities, a distinction that inspires and shapes basic...
The past several decades has seen considerable progress in our understanding of the neurobiology of ...
Prey are relentlessly faced with a series of survival problems to solve. One enduring problem is pre...
That the fear and stress of life-threatening experiences can leave an indelible trace on the brain i...
Sarah N Garfinkel,1,2 Hugo D Critchley1,2 1Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science, 2Department of ...
I suggest some methods for data-collection and analysis that may help researchers infer fear from vi...
In the whole animal kingdom, fear learning is an essential process that allows living beings to surv...
The ecology of fear concerns the population-, community-, and ecosystem-level consequences of the be...
Pavlovian conditioning paradigms have become important model systems for understand- ing the neurosc...
The study of “fear” can be traced back to the differences between “behaviorism” and “psychoanalysis”...