Yair Bar-Haim1, Inbar Morag, Shlomit Glickman. 1. The Adler Center of Child Development and Psychopathology, Department of Psychology, Tel Aviv University, Israel. yair1@post.tau.ac.il
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Threat-related attention biases have been implicated in the etiology and maintenance of anxiety disorders. As a result, attention bias modification (ABM) protocols have been employed as treatments for anxious adults. However, they have yet to emerge for children. A randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trial was conducted to examine the efficacy of an ABM protocol designed to facilitate attention disengagement from threats, thereby reducing anxiety and stress vulnerability in children. METHODS:Participants were 34 chronically high-anxious 10-year-olds. An emotional attention spatial cueing task was used. In the ABM condition (n=18), threat faces never cued the targets' locations, such that the valid-invalid ratio was 0%/100%, respectively. The valid-invalid ratio on neutral cue trials was 25%/75%, respectively. In the control condition, the valid-invalid ratio was 25%/75% for both neutral and threat faces. Anxiety and depression were measured pre- and post-training and pre- and post-stress induction. RESULTS: ABM facilitated attention disengagement from threat. In response to the stressor task, children in the ABM condition reported less state anxiety relative to controls. CONCLUSION:Computerized attention training procedures may be beneficial for reducing stress vulnerability in anxious children.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Threat-related attention biases have been implicated in the etiology and maintenance of anxiety disorders. As a result, attention bias modification (ABM) protocols have been employed as treatments for anxious adults. However, they have yet to emerge for children. A randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trial was conducted to examine the efficacy of an ABM protocol designed to facilitate attention disengagement from threats, thereby reducing anxiety and stress vulnerability in children. METHODS:Participants were 34 chronically high-anxious 10-year-olds. An emotional attention spatial cueing task was used. In the ABM condition (n=18), threat faces never cued the targets' locations, such that the valid-invalid ratio was 0%/100%, respectively. The valid-invalid ratio on neutral cue trials was 25%/75%, respectively. In the control condition, the valid-invalid ratio was 25%/75% for both neutral and threat faces. Anxiety and depression were measured pre- and post-training and pre- and post-stress induction. RESULTS: ABM facilitated attention disengagement from threat. In response to the stressor task, children in the ABM condition reported less state anxiety relative to controls. CONCLUSION: Computerized attention training procedures may be beneficial for reducing stress vulnerability in anxious children.
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Authors: Jennifer C Britton; Yair Bar-Haim; Michelle A Clementi; Lindsey S Sankin; Gang Chen; Tomer Shechner; Maxine A Norcross; Carolyn N Spiro; Kara M Lindstrom; Daniel S Pine Journal: Dev Cogn Neurosci Date: 2012-11-10 Impact factor: 6.464