Seda DuralEzgi GürHakan Çetinkaya2025-10-06202215434508, 154344941543-44941543-450810.3758/s13420-022-00536-2https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85132104611&doi=10.3758%2Fs13420-022-00536-2&partnerID=40&md5=6dd0f2bd586b573ffdd662f9721b12dahttps://gcris.yasar.edu.tr/handle/123456789/8666Various studies demonstrated that extinction training taking place shortly after the activation of the acquired fear could weaken the conditioned fear. The procedure is called post-retrieval extinction (PRE). However from the time it emerged it has suffered from inconsistencies in the ability of researchers to replicate the seemingly established effects. Extant literature implies that conditioned fear might be differentially sensitive to the nature of conditioned stimuli (CS) used. The aim of the present study therefore is threefold. First we aimed to replicate Schiller et al. (Nature 463 49–53. 2010) procedure in which the PRE had produced positive results with arbitrary CSs only. Also we examined the PRE as a function of CS type (ecological-fear-relevant (images of spider and snake) vs. arbitrary (images of yellow and blue circles)). Finally we aimed to investigate the long-term effects of the PRE (i.e. 24 h 15 d and 3 mo). The study consisted of acquisition re-activation and extinction and re-extinction phases. Dependent measure was the recovery of fear responses as indexed by the skin conductance responses (SCRs) and arousal ratings of the participants at the last trial of the extinction and the first trial of the re-extinction. All groups showed significant acquisition and extinction patterns compared to the other two groups (i.e. 6 h after the activating CS and without an activating stimulus) only the group that undertook extinction trials 10 min after the activating CS showed a sustained extinction. Thus our findings provided further evidence for the robustness of the PRE paradigm in preventing the recovery of extinguished fears behaviorally both with ecological and arbitrary stimuli. © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.EnglishEcological Vs. Arbitrary Css, Extinction, Fear Conditioning, Reconsolidation, Scr, Spontaneous Recovery, Animal, Arousal, Conditioned Reflex, Electrodermal Response, Fear, Human, Physiology, Reinforcement (psychology), Animals, Arousal, Conditioning Classical, Extinction Psychological, Fear, Galvanic Skin Response, Humansanimal, arousal, conditioned reflex, electrodermal response, fear, human, physiology, reinforcement (psychology), Animals, Arousal, Conditioning Classical, Extinction Psychological, Fear, Galvanic Skin Response, HumansTesting the memory reconsolidation hypothesis in a fear extinction paradigm: The effects of ecological and arbitrary stimuliArticle