| Literature DB >> 30840643 |
Birte Vogel1, Patrick Trotzke2, Sabine Steins-Loeber3, Giulia Schäfer1, Jana Stenger4, Martina de Zwaan1, Matthias Brand2, Astrid Müller1.
Abstract
There is an ongoing debate about whether buying-shopping disorder (BSD) should be acknowledged as a behavioral addiction. The current study investigated if mechanisms that play a prominent role in disorders due to substance use or addictive behaviors are relevant in BSD, particularly cue reactivity, craving, cognitive bias and reduced inhibitory control regarding addiction-relevant cues. The study included 39 treatment-seeking patients with BSD and 39 healthy control (HC) participants (29 women and 10 men in each group). Subjective responses toward buying/shopping-relevant visual cues were compared in patients vs. control participants. Experimental paradigms with neutral and semi-individualized buying/shopping-related pictures were administered to assess attentional bias, implicit associations and response inhibition with respect to different visual cues: Dot-probe paradigm (DPP), Implicit Association Task (IAT), Go/nogo-task (GNG). The severity of BSD, craving for buying/shopping, and symptoms of comorbid mental disorders (anxiety, depressive and hoarding disorders) were measured using standardized questionnaires. The BSD-group showed more general craving for buying/shopping, stronger subjective craving reactions towards buying/shopping-related visual cues, and more symptoms of anxiety, depression and hoarding disorder than control participants. Task performance in the DPP, IAT and GNG paradigm did not differ between the two groups. The present findings confirm previous research concerning the crucial role of craving in BSD. The assumption that attentional bias, implicit associations and deficient inhibitory control with respect to buying/shopping-related cues are relevant in BSD could not be proven. Future research should address methodological shortcomings and investigate the impact of acute psychosocial stress and present mood on craving responses, cognitive processing, and response inhibition in patients with BSD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30840643 PMCID: PMC6402626 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study procedure.
PBS = Pathological Buying Screener, SIR-14 = Saving-Inventory-Revised (without acquisition items), mDAQ = modified Desires of Alcohol questionnaire, GAD-7 = General Anxiety Disorder questionnaire, PHQ-9 = Patient Health Questionnaire depression scale.
Demographics and psychopathology.
| BSD-group | Control group | Test statistic | Effect size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age years, | 44.97 (10.83) | 44.77 (10.59) | .933 | ||
| Partnership status single, | 20 (51.3) | 13 (33.3) | .109 | Ф = .18 | |
| School years, | 11.36 (2.13) | 12.54 (1.65) | .008 | ||
| PBS | 48.85 (9.83) | 19.49 (3.16) | < .001 | ||
| SIR-14 | 36.41 (14.97) | 20.64 (4.49) | < .001 | ||
| GAD-7 | 10.79 (4.46) | 3.74 (2.75) | < .001 | ||
| PHQ-9 | 12.03 (6.47) | 3.95 (2.95) | < .001 | ||
BSD = buying-shopping disorder; PBS = Pathological Buying Screener, SIR-14 = Saving-Inventory-Revised (without acquisition items), GAD-7 = General Anxiety Disorder questionnaire, PHQ-9 = Patient Health Questionnaire depression scale
Fig 2Subjective ratings of buying-shopping pictures.
*** p < .001.
Fig 3Subjective craving reactions pre and post buying/shopping pictures presentation.
*** p < .001.
Two-tailed Pearson correlations (r) of buying-shopping disorder symptoms with craving variables, performance in experimental paradigms, and comorbid psychopathology.
| PBS | Arousal | Valence | Urge to buy | mDAQpre | mDAQpost | DPP | IAT | GNG | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| .78 | |||||||||
| .73 | .97 | ||||||||
| .69 | .90 | .90 | |||||||
| .73 | .79 | .74 | .83 | ||||||
| .69 | .80 | .75 | .82 | .97 | |||||
| .37 | .34 | .33 | .29 | .28 | .29 | ||||
| -.01 | -.12 | -.08 | -.12 | -.08 | -.08 | -.18 | |||
| .27 | .22 | .16 | .25 | .31 | .29 | -.02 | -.17 | ||
| .41 | .41 | .37 | .39 | .47 | .48 | .11 | -.14 | .24 | |
| .32 | .38 | .37 | .37 | .53 | .49 | < .01 | -.14 | .03 | |
| .39 | .51 | .50 | .53 | .67 | .66 | .08 | .12 | -.09 | |
| .21 | |||||||||
| .22 | .74 | ||||||||
| .03 | .71 | .64 | |||||||
| .31 | .50 | .21 | .12 | ||||||
| .25 | .47 | .14 | .23 | .78 | |||||
| .08 | .24 | .08 | .17 | .07 | .13 | ||||
| -.05 | .15 | .03 | .02 | -.06 | -.19 | .09 | |||
| .13 | .13 | -.04 | .25 | .03 | .01 | -.15 | .21 | ||
| -.04 | .23 | .30 | .36 | -.22 | -.15 | -.09 | .04 | .15 | |
| .13 | -.02 | -.06 | -.11 | .11 | .07 | -.13 | .04 | .17 | |
| .09 | -.13 | -.06 | -.10 | -.03 | -.09 | -.03 | .04 | .03 | |
PBS = Pathological Buying Screener, mDAQ = modified Desires of Alcohol questionnaire, DPP = Dotprobe paradigm (attentional bias score), IAT = Implicit Association Test (D2SD), GNG = Go/no-go paradigm (commission error bias score), SIR-14 = Saving-Inventory-Revised (without acquisition items), GAD-7 = General Anxiety Disorder questionnaire, PHQ-9 = Patient Health Questionnaire depression scale.
* p < .05,
** p < .01,
*** p < .001.
Experimental task performance of patients with buying-shopping disorder (BSD) compared to control participants.
| BSD-group | Control group | Test statistic | Effect size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attentional bias score | 4.76 (19.56) | .91 (21.90) | .82 | .416 | .18 |
| Reaction time in congruent trials | 553.55 (124.15) | 506.89 (91.18) | 1.89 | .062 | .43 |
| Reaction time in incongruent trials | 558.31 (119.11) | 507.80 (90.70) | 2.11 | .038 | .48 |
| D2SD, | .24 (.48) | .06 (.49) | 1.59 | .116 | .37 |
| Commission error bias, | 1.44 (4.68) | 0.97 (5.60) | .39 | .694 | .09 |
| Total commission errors in response to buying/shopping-related cues | 6.21 (3.95) | 6.74 (4.43) | .57 | .573 | .12 |
| Total commission errors in response to neutral cues | 7.64 (6.37) | 7.72 (4.50) | .06 | .951 | .01 |
a dotprobe following buying/shopping-specific pictures,
b dotprobe following neutral pictures.
Summary of regression analyses (step 3) investigating the impact of craving on the relationship between performance in experimental paradigms and severity of buying-shopping disorder (dependent variable: Pathological Buying Screener) in patients with buying-shopping disorder (n = 39).
| Predictors | β | β | β | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DPP | .11 | .74 | .461 | IAT | .13 | 1.14 | .261 | GNG | -.01 | -.06 | .953 | |||
| Arousal | .74 | 6.23 | < .001 | Arousal | .79 | 7.46 | < .001 | Arousal | .78 | 7.17 | < .001 | |||
| DPP x Arousal | .00 | .00 | .999 | .61 | IAT x Arousal | -.11 | -.98 | .334 | .62 | GNG x Arousal | .13 | .66 | .511 | .63 |
| DPP | .097 | .62 | .542 | IAT | .08 | .70 | .485 | GNG | .01 | .08 | .940 | |||
| Valence | .655 | 5.11 | < .001 | Valence | .72 | 6.15 | < .001 | Valence | .73 | 6.10 | < .001 | |||
| DPP x Valence | .072 | .45 | .658 | .53 | IAT x Valence | -.15 | -1.29 | .205 | .54 | GNG x Valence | .17 | .85 | .400 | .56 |
| DPP | .106 | .68 | .501 | IAT | .14 | 1.07 | .293 | GNG | .08 | .31 | .755 | |||
| Urge to buy | .599 | 4.62 | < .001 | Urge to buy | .67 | 5.42 | < .001 | Urge to buy | .67 | 5.25 | < .001 | |||
| DPP x Urge to buy | .140 | .87 | .388 | .50 | IAT x Urge to buy | -.17 | -1.24 | .223 | .49 | GNG x Urge to buy | .03 | .14 | .885 | .49 |
| DPP | .22 | 1.54 | .133 | IAT | .11 | .86 | .395 | GNG | .19 | .80 | .428 | |||
| mDAQpost | 4.91 | < .001 | mDAQpost | .68 | 5.63 | < .001 | mDAQpost | .67 | 5.31 | < .001 | ||||
| DPP x mDAQpost | -.09 | -.62 | .541 | .50 | IAT x mDAQpost | -.21 | -1.65 | .108 | .50 | GNG x mDAQpost | -.13 | -.56 | .581 | .49 |
Arousal, Valence, Urge to buy = subjective buying/shopping pictures ratings, mDAQ = modified Desires of Alcohol questionnaire, DPP = Dotprobe paradigm (attentional bias score), IAT = Implicit Association Test (D2SD), GNG = Go/no-go paradigm (commission error bias score).