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Intolerance of uncertainty, and not social anxiety, is associated with compromised extinction of social threat
- Source :
- Behaviour research and therapy. 139
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Extinction-resistant threat is regarded as a central hallmark of pathological anxiety. However, it remains relatively under-studied in social anxiety. Here we sought to determine whether self-reported trait social anxiety is associated with compromised threat extinction learning and retention. We tested this hypothesis within two separate, socially relevant conditioning studies. In the first experiment, a Selective Extinction Through Cognitive Evaluation (SECE) paradigm was used, which included a cognitive component during the extinction phase, while experiment 2 used a traditional threat extinction paradigm. Skin conductance responses and subjective ratings of anxiety (experiment 1 and 2) and expectancy (experiment 2) were collected across both experiments. The findings of both studies demonstrated no effect of social anxiety on extinction learning or retention. Instead, results from experiment 1 indicated that individual differences in Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) were associated with the ability to use contextual cues to decrease a conditioned response during SECE. However, during extinction retention, high IU predicted greater generalisation across context cues. Findings of experiment 2 revealed that higher IU was associated with impaired extinction learning and retention. The results from both studies suggest that compromised threat extinction is likely to be a characteristic of high levels of IU and not social anxiety.
- Subjects :
- Expectancy theory
Cognitive evaluation theory
050103 clinical psychology
05 social sciences
Social anxiety
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Context (language use)
Cognition
social sciences
Extinction (psychology)
humanities
03 medical and health sciences
Psychiatry and Mental health
Clinical Psychology
0302 clinical medicine
Trait
medicine
Anxiety
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
medicine.symptom
Psychology
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Clinical psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1873622X
- Volume :
- 139
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Behaviour research and therapy
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....58784ec198be52ea4253e3eb1d2e4dbb