| Literature DB >> 19738911 |
Jorg Huijding, Peter J de Jong.
Abstract
This study tested whether high spider fearful individuals' implicit and explicit attitudes toward spiders are sensitive to exposure treatment, and whether post-treatment implicit and/or explicit attitudes are related to the generalization of treatment effects. Self-reported explicit and implicit attitudes (indexed with a pictorial Extrinsic Affective Simon Task) were assessed in high spider fearful, treatment-seeking individuals (n = 60) before and after a one-session exposure in vivo treatment and at 2-month follow-up. A group of non-fearful participants (n = 30) completed the same assessments once. Results show that implicit attitudes did not change following treatment over and above test-retest effects. In contrast, explicit attitudes did change favorably following treatment, but negative explicit attitudes at post-treatment were associated with less pronounced overt approach behavior at follow-up. These findings support the idea that residual negative explicit attitudes interfere with the generalization of treatment effects.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 19738911 PMCID: PMC2737109 DOI: 10.1007/s10608-007-9167-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cognit Ther Res ISSN: 0147-5916
Means and standard deviations for the indirect, self-report, and behavioral measures as a function of group
| Measures | Pretest | Retest | Posttest | Follow-up | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NFCG (T0) | TCG (T0) | TG (T0) | TCG (T1) | TCG (T2) | TG (T1) | TCG (T3) | TG (T2) | |
| Age | 35.2 (13.1) | 32.9 (10.2) | 35.0 (12.0) | |||||
| Education | 4.1 (1.2) | 3.9 (1.2) | 4.0 (1.5) | |||||
| SPQ | 2.4 (3.6) | 21.4 (4.5) | 20.2 (3.8) | – | 14.4 (5.8) | 13.6 (6.7) | 14.8 (7.2) | 13.5 (7.2) |
| BAT | 7.7 (0.9) | 3.7 (2.1) | 4.0 (2.2) | – | 6.9 (1.9) | 6.9 (1.8) | 6.3 (2.1) | 6.4 (1.9) |
| SA-pos | 5.5 (2.3) | 1.6 (2.5) | 1.7 (2.7) | – | 4.1 (2.6) | 3.6 (2.8) | 3.5 (2.4) | 3.3 (2.8) |
| SA-neg | 2.6 (2.1) | 8.1 (2.3) | 8.8 (1.7) | – | 4.7 (2.6) | 4.5 (3.5) | 5.5 (3.0) | 6.2 (2.5) |
| EAST | 4.9 (11.5) | −1.7 (11.0) | −3.7 (13.1) | −2.4 (11.4) | 0.6 (6.7) | −0.5 (11.7) | 2.4 (9.5) | 7.1 (17.3) |
Note: NFCG = non-fearful control group; TCG = delayed-treatment control group; TG = treatment group; Education could range from 0 (no education completed), to 6 (a masters degree); SPQ = Spider Phobia Questionnaire; BAT = Behavioral Approach Test (higher scores indicating closer approach); SA-pos / SA-neg = Self-reported positive (pos) or negative (neg) Attitudes (higher scores indicate stronger attitudes); EAST = accuracy-based Extrinsic Affective Simon Task scores (higher scores indicating more positive attitudes toward spiders), note that the scores presented here exclude extreme scores and scores of individuals with more than 30% errors on that particular EAST
Design of the pictorial EAST
| Phase | #, type of Trials | Left hand | Right hand |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 30 attribute | positive | negative |
| 2 | 18 target | portrait | landscape |
Note: The assignment of attribute valence (positive, negative) and target format (portrait, landscape) to the left or the right response key was counterbalanced over participants. The critical test phase is presented in bold face
Fig. 1Schematic overview of the design of the study
Pre-treatment correlations between the EAST-scores, self-report, and behavioral measures of fear
| SPQ | SA neg | SA pos | BAT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EAST | −.34** | −.28* | .27* | .38** |
| SPQ | – | .83** | −.68** | −.79** |
| SA neg | – | −.70** | −.70** | |
| SA pos | – | .62** |
Note: * = p < .05, ** = p < .01. Extreme scores and/or scores of individuals with more than 30% errors on the EAST were excluded from these analyses
| Category | IAPS numbers |
|---|---|
| Positive square | 1750, 2150, 2550, 5910, 8501 |
| Negative square | 3063, 3080, 3130, 3500, 6313 |
| Weapons oblong | 6230, 6250, 6260 |
Note: The spider and maggot target pictures were not selected from the IAPS but made by the authors or found on the internet. These pictures can be obtained from the corresponding author