Human defensive freezing and its impact on decision making

titleHuman defensive freezing and its impact on decision making
start_date2023/11/20
schedule14h
onlineno
location_infoSalle du Conseil
summaryBehavioural scientists often assume that automatic defensive threat reactions, while essential in explaining animal behavior, only have limited value when it comes to understand human behavior. There is, however, increasing evidence that defensive reactions, such as freezing, have an impact on subsequent approach-avoidance decisions under acute threat in humans. Understanding the mechanisms that drive such decisions is particularly relevant for patients with anxiety disorders, whose persistent avoidance is key to the maintenance of their anxiety. In recent years, computational psychiatry has made substantial progress formalizing the mechanisms through which we make (mal)adaptive decisions. However, most current models ignore the transient psychophysiological state of the decision maker. Here, I argue that the balance between para-sympathetic and sympathetic activity is instrumental in driving the psychophysiological state of freezing, and that it influences perception and approach-avoidance decisions under acute threat in different ways. To illustrate, I first explore the effects of freezing on different kinds of human action decisions under threat. Next, I discuss recent translational (rodent-human) work that has helped to characterize the neural mechanisms implicated in animal and human defensive freezing. Finally, I will discuss effects of the psychophysiological state of freezing on perceptual sensitivity. Overall, this work suggests that rather than reflecting a passive fear state — the particular somatic and cognitive characteristics of freezing help to optimize sensory processing, action preparation and value-integration during approach-avoidance decision making. This reconceptualization of freezing has implications for its role in decision-making under threat and for understanding maladaptive coping in anxiety related disorders.
responsiblesVassard