1. How does attention training work in social phobia: disengagement from threat or re-engagement to non-threat?
- Author
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Heeren A, Lievens L, and Philippot P
- Subjects
- Anxiety psychology, Attention, Cues, Female, Humans, Male, Phobic Disorders psychology, Photic Stimulation, Anxiety therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods, Emotions, Phobic Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Social phobics exhibit an attentional bias for threat in probe detection paradigms. Attention training, whereby probes always replace non-threat in a display presenting both threat and non-threat, reduces attentional bias for threat and social anxiety. However, it remains unclear whether therapeutic benefits result from learning to disengage attention from threat or learning to orient attention towards non-threat. In this experiment, social phobics were randomly assigned to one of four training conditions: (1) disengagement from threat, (2) engagement towards non-threat, (3) disengagement from threat and re-engagement towards non-threat, and (4) a control condition. Effects were examined on subjective and behavioral responses to a subsequent stressor. Data revealed that training to disengage from threat reduces behavioral indices of anxiety. Engagement towards non-threat faces did not have effects in itself. These results support that the difficulty in disengaging attention from threat is a critical process in maintenance of the disorder., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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