Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03601377

Attention Bias Modification Treatment in Social Anxiety

Attention Bias Modification Treatment in Social Anxiety: Avoidance or Exposure to Threatening Faces? The Role of Pre-existing Attentional Biases and State Anxiety

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
140 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Cyprus · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study evaluates attention modification in social anxiety and It is comprised by 2 experiments. At experiment 1 socially anxious participants will receive either training away from threatening faces or placebo intervention and at experiment 2 they will receive either one of these 2 groups or training towards threatening faces. At experiment 2 training will be done under state anxiety levels (video-recording of a speech). Anxiety levels (self-reports, physiological and behavioral measures) as well as attentional biases changes will be examined at pre and post - intervention levels plus 6 months follow-up only for experiment 1.

Detailed description

Social anxiety is a highly prevalent disorder in the population. Even though there are effective interventions that can help people who suffer from it, many of them do not seek or receive an evidence-based, face to face treatment. According to cognitive models, attention to social threat is one of the principles that maintain social anxiety. In fact, individuals with social anxiety present attention bias to threat stimuli. However, there is inconsistency in the literature with regards to attentional biases that individuals with anxiety present. A recent model is the vigilance-avoidance hypothesis, in which socially anxious initially focus on the threat and then they avoid it. Therefore, better understanding and then aiming to modify these attentional biases in a computerized manner, with minimal therapist interaction can be a novel and promising way to treat social anxiety, even among patients who avoid presenting for therapy. Two experiments are aiming to shed some light with regards to the effect of attention bias modification treatment in individuals with social anxiety, taking into consideration the previous mixed results. The first experiment compares training attention to be directed away from threat with a placebo treatment. Approximately 60 socially anxious individuals are randomly allocated in the 2 groups. A structured interview and self-report assessment are done pre-treatment, post-treatment and 6 months follow-up. The second experiment adds a third group of training towards threat (i.e. exposure), investigating if changing attentional avoidance can also affect anxiety levels. Moreover, the second experiment attempts to improve the typical attention modification paradigm by targeting treatment to participants' identified pre-experimental attentional biases. In addition, predictors of treatment effectiveness will be studied and particularly pre-intervention attentional biases as well as state anxiety. Participants are approximately 90 adults with social phobia who are randomly allocated in treatment and placebo groups. In experiment 2 participants will also be assessed behaviourally as well as physiologically to better demonstrate that anxiety reactions to anxiogenic situations have been reduced between pre and post treatment and that they are smaller than those of a placebo control group. It is expected that participants in the intervention groups will show reduced attentional bias and social anxiety symptoms in comparison with the placebo group in both studies. In addition, the kind of pre-intervention bias as well as state anxiety will moderate anxiety changes. This study will enrich existing research on attention bias modification treatment by shedding light into potential mechanisms of change and will examine ways to improve the efficacy of this intervention.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALTraining away from threatDot-probe task: Pairs of stimuli, angry - neutral face or neutral - neutral faces of the same actor (20 different individuals;10 male, 10 female) are presented horizontally in the centre of the screen (160 trials; 120 angry-neutral and 40 neutral-neutral). Each trial begins with a fixation cross (500 ms), on which the participants are instructed to focus their gaze. After that a pair of faces follows which is presented on the screen for 500ms. After the faces presentation a small visual probe (\< or \>) appears at the same place of one of the two faces. Participants have to determine which symbol appeared by clicking right or left on the mouse as quickly as possible. The target probe remains on the screen until there is a response, which starts a new trial.
BEHAVIORALTraining towards threatDot-probe task: Pairs of stimuli, angry - neutral face or neutral - neutral faces of the same actor (20 different individuals;10 male, 10 female) are presented horizontally in the centre of the screen (160 trials; 120 angry-neutral and 40 neutral-neutral). Each trial begins with a fixation cross (500 ms), on which the participants are instructed to focus their gaze. After that a pair of faces follows which is presented on the screen for 500ms. After the faces presentation a small visual probe (\< or \>) appears at the same place of one of the two faces. Participants have to determine which symbol appeared by clicking right or left on the mouse as quickly as possible. The target probe remains on the screen until there is a response, which starts a new trial.
BEHAVIORALPlaceboDot-probe task: Pairs of stimuli, angry - neutral face or neutral - neutral faces of the same actor (20 different individuals;10 male, 10 female) are presented horizontally in the centre of the screen (160 trials; 120 angry-neutral and 40 neutral-neutral). Each trial begins with a fixation cross (500 ms), on which the participants are instructed to focus their gaze. After that a pair of faces follows which is presented on the screen for 500ms. After the faces presentation a small visual probe (\< or \>) appears at the same place of one of the two faces. Participants have to determine which symbol appeared by clicking right or left on the mouse as quickly as possible. The target probe remains on the screen until there is a response, which starts a new trial.

Timeline

Start date
2016-10-03
Primary completion
2018-07-31
Completion
2018-09-30
First posted
2018-07-26
Last updated
2018-10-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Cyprus

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03601377. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.