Fear Conditioning After Home Invasion
Keywords:
Home Invasion Trauma Fear Conditioning Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Environmental Safety Reconstruction Neuropsychological Trauma ResponseAbstract
Home invasion is a deeply distressing form of interpersonal trauma that disrupts perceptions of safety in one’s most intimate environment. Survivors often experience persistent psychological symptoms shaped by fear conditioning, hypervigilance, and alterations in threat perception. This paper examines the neurobiological and cognitive mechanisms of fear conditioning following home invasion, evaluates behavioral outcomes such as avoidance, sleep disruption, and startle responses, and proposes an integrated Fear Conditioning and Environmental Safety Reconstruction Model (FC-ESRM) to support long-term recovery. The study emphasizes trauma-informed therapeutic approaches, ethical considerations, and survivor autonomy, avoiding pathologization or victim-blaming.

