| Literature DB >> 25909846 |
Alexandre Heeren1, Chris Baeken2, Marie-Anne Vanderhasselt3, Pierre Philippot1, Rudi de Raedt3.
Abstract
People with anxiety disorders show an attentional bias for threat (AB), and Attention Bias Modification (ABM) procedures have been found to reduce this bias. However, the underlying processes accounting for this effect remain poorly understood. One explanation suggests that ABM requires the modification of attention control, driven by the recruitment of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). In the present double-blind study, we examined whether modifying left DLPFC activation influences the effect of ABM on AB. We used transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to directly modulate cortical excitability of the left DLPFC during an ABM procedure designed to reduce AB to threat. Anodal tDCS increases excitability, whereas cathodal tDCS decreases it. We randomly assigned highly trait-anxious individuals to one of three conditions: 1) ABM combined with cathodal tDCS, 2) ABM combined with anodal tDCS, or 3) ABM combined with sham tDCS. We assessed the effects of these manipulations on both reaction times and eye-movements on a task indexing AB. Results indicate that combining ABM and anodal tDCS over the left DLPFC reduces the total duration that participants' gaze remains fixated on threat, as assessed using eye-tracking measurement. However, in contrast to previous studies, there were no changes in AB from baseline to post-training for participants that received ABM without tDCS. As the tendency to maintain attention to threat is known to play an important role in the maintenance of anxiety, the present findings suggest that anodal tDCS over the left DLPFC may be considered as a promising tool to reduce the maintenance of gaze to threat. Implications for future translational research combining ABM and tDCS are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25909846 PMCID: PMC4409339 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Illustration of the attention bias modification procedure designed to reduce the attentional bias towards threat, the tDCS setup, and the change in the duration time that participants’ gaze remained fixated on threat as a function of time and condition.
Part a: In the original version of the dot-probe paradigm, participants viewed two stimuli (i.e., a threatening and a neutral) presented in two areas of a computer screen for approximately 500 ms. Immediately after the pictures disappeared, a probe replaced one of the stimuli. Participants responded to the probe as quickly as possible. In attention training, researchers typically modify the original task such so that the probe nearly always (i.e., 95% of the trials) replaces the neutral stimulus, thereby training subjects’ attention to be redirected towards non-threat cues. To avoid the publication of images depicting individuals without their written informed consent (as outlined in the PLOS consent form), the faces shown in the illustration are not from the Karolinska Directed Emotional Faces but are 3D-computer generated faces. Part b: One electrode was positioned centered over F3 (left DLPFC) and the other was placed over the contralateral supraorbital area. In the anodal condition, the electrode positioned centered over was the anode and the other one the cathode. In contrast, the reverse allocation was used in the cathodal condition. For the sham stimulation, the electrodes were positioned similar as when administering tDCS stimulation; however, the current was ramped down after 30 seconds. In each condition, a constant current of 2 mA intensity was applied for 25 min. Part c: Mean duration time that participants’ gaze remained fixated on threat at baseline and post-training. Error bars represent standard errors of the mean. *, p <. 05 (corrected using the Tukey procedure).
Fig 2Flowchart depicting passage of participants through the study.
ABM is for Attention Bias Modification; tDCS is for transcranial Direct Current Stimulation.
Participant characteristics (SD in parentheses).
| Anodal tDCS during ABM (N = 18) | Cathodal tDCS during ABM (N = 19) | Sham tDCS during ABM (N = 19) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 19.89 (1.88) | 20.00 (1.70) | 19.84 (1.89) |
| BDI-II | 7.89 (6.85) | 9.68 (8.25) | 6.68 (5.45) |
| STAI-S | 51.94 (3.89) | 51.21 (2.82) | 51.42 (2.99) |
| STAI-T | 47.79 (9.05) | 47.47 (8.99) | 47.37 (9.77) |
| RRS | 22.56 (8.88) | 22.83 (7.15) | 23.53 (5.23) |
ABM is for Attention Bias Modification; tDCS is for transcranial direct current stimulation; BDI-II is for the Beck Depression Inventory Second Edition; STAI-S is for the State version of the State and Trait Anxiety Inventory; STAI-T is for the Trait version of the State and Trait Anxiety Inventory; RRS is for the Ruminative Response Scale; NS is for Non-significant.
Means of Behavioral (d score) and Eye-movements Indices of Attentional Bias as a Function of Condition and Time (SD in Parentheses).
| Anodal tDCSduring ABM | Cathodal tDCSduring ABM | Sham tDCSduring ABM | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Post-training | Baseline | Post-training | Baseline | Post-training | |
|
| -.439 (19.49) | 2.35 (17.91) | 6.93 (15.36) | 3.68 (11.46) | -.138 (18.36) | 1.97 (7.96) |
| Time to first fixation on angry faces | 190.60 (46.70) | 179.06 (75.53) | 142.94 (33.87) | 154.01 (43.02) | 173.45 (45.97 | 176.05 (53.18) |
| Time to first fixation on neutral faces | 180.71 (36.10) | 172.08 (77.04) | 150.32 (49.99) | 155.57 (40.53) | 171.13 (49.65) | 175.05 (48.01) |
| Duration of the first fixation on angry faces | 218.79 (74.52) | 241.26 (93.10) | 275.39 (73.76) | 266.15 (79.32) | 245.16 (80.18) | 228.04 (76.40) |
| Duration of the first fixation on neutral faces | 231.10 (67.72) | 249.82 (95.45) | 261.09 (85.69) | 267.68 (77.65) | 252.47 (64.62) | 248.02 (81.66) |
| Overall time dwelled on angry faces | 269.70 (73.42) | 238.54 (44.30)* | 263.45 (35.25) | 286.34 (53.94) | 274.43 (50.72) | 283.10 (61.20) |
| Overall time dwelled on neutral faces | 257.01 (74.92) | 262.79 (58.80) | 257.99 (36.69) | 285.46 (62.01) | 287.31 (61.20) | 292.54 (71.51) |
| EM bias score | 51.20 (6.38) | 52.92 (6.37) | 49.68 (3.65) | 49.52 (5.52) | 49.24 (5.67) | 52.73 (7.61) |
ABM is for Attention Bias Modification; tDCS is for transcranial direct current stimulation. Group difference at post-training that was significant at p <. 05 (adjusted using the Tukey procedure) are flagged with “*”.