Deleting fears from the brain means you might never need to face them
Conventional wisdom suggest that
facing your fears is a good way to overcome them, indeed various forms
of therapy for fear-related conditions are based on this premise. But by
using a combination of artificial intelligence (AI) and neuroscience,
an international team of researchers have come up with a way to
eliminate specific fears from the brain without the subject actually
needing to confront them, an approach that could offer more comfortable
ways of treating phobias and post-traumatic stress disorders
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According to the National Institute of Mental Health, 18 percent
of US adults are diagnosed with a fear or anxiety disorder each year. A
typical approach to treating such fear-related conditions is what is
known as exposure therapy, where subjects are made to face their fears
in a safe environment, conditioning the brain to embrace the low level
or entire absence of any real danger. So somebody with a fear of flying
may be shown photo after photo of airplanes, or somebody with
arachnophobia may be shown images of spiders. The idea is that through
repetition, the anxious response to these cues is gradually erased from
the brain.
But the approach does have its
flaws. By nature, this type of therapy is not exactly pleasant, and its
effects are not permanent so some patients will experience relapses down
the road. This has lead scientists to explore different ways to enhance the effectiveness of treatment, or take different approaches altogether.
The new technique developed by
neuroscientists at the University of Cambridge, in collaboration with US
and Japanese researchers, falls into the latter category. They claim
that their approach enables fear memories to be removed from the brain
without them ever needing to be triggered in the patient. Here's how it
works.
It revolves around a new method
of identifying fear memories in the brain that the team has dubbed
"Decoded Neurofeedback." The technique uses image-recognition methods
powered by artificial intelligence to monitor and recognize complex
brain patterns representing particular fear memories. This was put to
the test with 17 healthy volunteers, who were shown computer images and
given short electric shocks at the same time in order to form fear
memories in their brains.
"When we induced a mild fear
memory in the brain, we were able to develop a fast and accurate method
of reading it by using AI algorithms," explains Dr Ben Seymour from the
University of Cambridge. "The challenge then was to find a way to reduce
or remove the fear memory, without ever consciously evoking it."
Armed with their new,
fast-acting pattern recognition software, the team noticed that even
when the subjects were resting, traces of the shock-induced fear memory
patterns would still make fleeting appearances. And because the subjects
weren't even consciously aware of them, these flashes represented the
perfect opportunity to undermine what they meant.
So each time a pattern was
detected, the patients were handed small sums of cash. They were told
that the amount of money they were earning was linked to their brain
activity, but they weren't told exactly how, and this process was
repeated over three days. By the end, it seemed that the brains had been
reconfigured to associate those fear memories with something much more
positive. The team reinforced this by then showing the subjects the
computer images originally linked to the shocks.
"Remarkably, we could no longer
see the typical fear skin-sweating response," says Dr Ai Koizumi, from
the Advanced Telecommunicatons Research Institute International, Kyoto.
"Nor could we identify enhanced activity in the amygdala – the brain's
fear centre. This meant that we'd been able to reduce the fear memory
without the volunteers ever consciously experiencing the fear memory in
the process."
The researchers note that 17 is
a pretty small sample size, but the promising results of the initial
study have them hopeful that with further development, the technique
could evolve into a clinical treatment for fear-related disorders.
"To apply this to patients, we
need to build a library of the brain information codes for the various
things that people might have a pathological fear of, say, spiders,"
says Seymour. "Then, in principle, patients could have regular sessions
of Decoded Neurofeedback to gradually remove the fear response these
memories trigger."
The team's research was published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour.






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