| Literature DB >> 31249540 |
Ulrich W D Müller1,2, Cilia L M Witteman2, Jan Spijker2, Georg W Alpers1.
Abstract
The peak-end memory bias has been well documented for the retrospective evaluation of pain. It describes that the retrospective evaluation of pain is largely based on the discomfort experienced at the most intense point (peak) and at the end of the episode. This is notable because it means that longer episodes with a better ending can be remembered as less aversive than shorter ones; this is even if the former had the same peak in painfulness and an overall longer duration of pain. Until now, this bias has not been studied in the domain of anxiety despite the high relevance of variable levels of anxiety in the treatment of anxiety disorders. Therefore, we set out to replicate the original studies but with an induction of variable levels of anxiety. Of 64 women, half watched a clip from a horror movie which ended at the most frightening moment. The other half watched an extended version of this clip with a moderately frightening ending. Afterward, all participants were asked to rate the global anxiety which was elicited by the video. When the film ended at the most frightening moment, participants retrospectively reported more anxiety than participants who watched the extended version. This is the first study to document that the peak-end bias can be found in the domain of anxiety. These findings require replication and extension to a treatment context to evaluate its implications for exposure therapy.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; exposure; memory bias; peak-end bias; recall bias
Year: 2019 PMID: 31249540 PMCID: PMC6582762 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Left panel: Sinaplot (Sidiropoulos et al., 2017) showing the original data (see text footnote 2), means and confidence intervals of the reported state anxiety directly after the horror movie sequences separately for the condition with the moderate end and the condition ending with the peak. Right panel: Sinaplot showing the original data (see text footnote 2), means and confidence intervals of the reported retrospective anxiety 20 min after the presentation of the horror movie sequences separately for the condition with the moderate end and the condition ending with the peak.
Means, standard deviations and MANOVA comparisons for the questionnaires scores of the two conditions (peak anxiety at the end of the sequence n = 32, moderate anxiety at the end of the sequence n = 32).
| Questionnaire | Peak ending | Moderate ending | MANOVA | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| df | ||
| STAI-T | 40.41 (9.88) | 35.78 (10.12) | 3.42 | 62 | 0.069 |
| N | 23.75 (6.17) | 24.03 (6.75) | 0.03 | 62 | 0.862 |
| E | 24.47 (5.95) | 25.06 (6.32) | 0.15 | 62 | 0.700 |
| O | 28.53 (6.02) | 29.50 (5.54) | 0.45 | 62 | 0.506 |
| C | 29.28 (6.65) | 26.50 (6.70) | 2.78 | 62 | 0.101 |
| A | 34.59 (3.28) | 24.37 (3.19) | 0.07 | 62 | 0.788 |
| Enjoyment | 1.56 (0.91) | 1.88 (1.10) | 1.53 | 62 | 0.221 |
STAI-T, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory-Trait form (.