Fear study reveals workings of unconscious minds

Spiderman's intuitive response to danger - a fictional instinct called spider sense - gives him the edge over his adversaries. Now scientists have shown that in the real world, even lesser mortals can quickly learn to detect and respond to threats without being aware of them.

Researchers studying how our minds develop fears in response to danger found that people can quickly learn to recognise a threat even when they are unaware of it - but this learning is swiftly forgotten.

On the other hand, when people are aware of the threat, they take longer to learn to be afraid of it, but retain the fear in the long term.

Scientists from the University of Edinburgh and New York University, who carried out the study, say the finding may be a key insight into the differences between conscious and nonconscious mental processes.

Researchers measured physiological fear responses - the amount of sweat on the fingertips - in groups of people who looked at pictures and were given mild electric shocks whenever one of these pictures was shown.

All the people who participated in the study saw the pictures with just one eye. But whereas some of them were allowed to see the pictures clearly, the researchers suppressed the pictures from other subjects' awareness by showing colourful, dynamic images to the other eye.

The study found that subjects who were prevented from consciously seeing the pictures learned to be afraid of the image associated with a shock more quickly than those who were allowed to see them without suppression.

However, these subjects quickly forgot this association between the images and the electric shocks as the experiment continued. In contrast, those subjects who were allowed to see the image clearly formed a stronger association over time.

The study has been published in Current Biology.

"How the brain reacts to threats is key to understanding how human beings function. This study shows that we are capable of learning very rapidly that something is a threat even when we don't perceive it consciously. Such learning, however, is fleeting. With awareness, learning is slower but more stable. Conscious processes might therefore be less automatic, but essential for forming stable impressions that allow us to hang on to what we learn."

David Carmel
University of Edinburgh's Department of Psychology, who jointly led the study with Candace Raio, of New York University

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Psychology at Edinburgh