Researchers have studied psychological disorders extensively from a common cause perspective, in which symptoms are treated as independent indicators of an underlying disease. In contrast, the causal systems perspective seeks to understand the importance of individual symptoms and symptom-to-symptom relations. In the current study, we used network analysis to examine the relationships between and among depression and anxiety symptoms from the causal systems perspective. We utilized data from a large psychiatric sample at admission and discharge from a partial hospital program (N = 1029, mean treatment duration = 8 days). We investigated features of the depression/anxiety network including topology, network centrality, stability of the network at admission and discharge as well as change in the network over the course of treatment. Results revealed that individual symptoms of depression and anxiety were more related to other symptoms within each disorder than to symptoms between disorders. Sad mood and worry were among the most central symptoms in the network. The network structure was stable both at admission and between admission and discharge, although the overall strength of symptom relationships increased as symptom severity decreased over the course of treatment. Examining depression and anxiety symptoms as dynamic systems may provide novel insights into the maintenance of these mental health problems.
Research suggests that individuals with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) show an attention bias for threat-relevant information. However, few studies have examined the causal role of attention bias in the maintenance of anxiety and whether modification of such biases may reduce pathological anxiety symptoms. In the current paper, we tested the hypothesis that an eight-session attention modification program would (a) decrease attention bias to threat and (b) reduce symptoms of GAD. Participants completed a probe detection task by identifying letters ("E" or "F") replacing one member of a pair of words. We trained attention by including a contingency between the location of the probe and the non-threat word in one group (Attention Modification program, AMP) and not in the other (Attention Control condition, ACC). Participants in the AMP showed change in attention bias and a decrease in anxiety, as indicated by both self report and interviewer measures. These effects were not present in the ACC group. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that attention plays a causal role in the maintenance of GAD and suggest that altering attention mechanisms may effectively reduce anxiety.Researchers have used a wide range of methods borrowed from cognitive psychology to examine attention bias to threat in individuals with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD; Mathews & MacLeod, 1985MacLeod, Mathews, & Tata, 1986;Mogg, Millar, & Bradley, 2000). Research using these methods has consistently produced evidence that patients with GAD preferentially attend to threat relevant stimuli over neutral stimuli when the two compete for processing priority.In a seminal study, MacLeod, Mathews, and Tata (1986) developed the probe detection paradigm to measure attention bias to threat in GAD. In this paradigm, participants see two words, one above the other, on a computer screen. One word is neutral (e.g., table), and the other word has a threatening meaning (e.g., disease). Participants are asked to read the upper word and ignore the lower word. On critical trials (25%), either the upper or the lower word is replaced with a dot probe (·) and participants are asked to signal the presence of the probe by pressing a button. MacLeod et al. (1986) found that individuals with Generalized Anxiety Disorder detect probes that replace threat words, either in the upper or the lower portion of the screen, faster than probes that replace neutral words. Thus, clinically anxious individuals with GAD consistently showed an attention bias toward threat. On the other hand, non-anxious controls tended to demonstrate an attention bias away from threat in this paradigm. In a later replication of this study, MacLeod and Mathews (1988) threat stimuli from the mean response latency for trials where the probe replaced the neutral stimuli, such that larger numbers revealed greater bias for threat. Using this index, these authors again found that individuals with GAD show an attention bias toward threat.Two recent reviews of attention bias in anxiety ...
We conducted a randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled trial to examine the efficacy of an attention training procedure in reducing symptoms of social anxiety in forty-four individuals diagnosed with Generalized Social Phobia (GSP). Attention training comprised a probe detection task where pictures of faces with either a threatening or neutral emotional expression cued different locations on the computer screen. In the Attention Modification Program (AMP), participants responded to a probe that always followed neutral faces when paired with a threatening face, thereby directing attention away from threat. In the Attention Control Condition (ACC), the probe appeared with equal frequency in the position of the threat and neutral faces. Results revealed that the AMP facilitated attention disengagement from threat from pre- to post-assessment, and reduced clinician- and self-reported symptoms of social anxiety relative to the ACC. Participants no longer meeting DSM-IV criteria for GSP at post-assessment were 50% in the AMP and 14% in the ACC. Symptom reduction in the AMP group was maintained during four-month follow-up assessment. These results suggest that computerized attention training procedures may be beneficial for treating social phobia.
Research suggests that individuals with social anxiety show an attention bias for threat-relevant information However, few studies have directly manipulated attention to examine its effect on anxiety. In the current article, the authors tested the hypothesis that an attention modification program would be effective in reducing anxiety response and improving performance on a public-speaking challenge. Socially anxious participants completed a probe detection task by identifying letters (E or F) replacing one member of a pair of faces (neutral or disgust). The authors trained attention by including a contingency between the location of the neutral face and the probe in one group (Attention Modification Program; AMP). Participants in the AMP group showed significantly less attention bias to threat after training and lower levels of anxiety in response to a public-speaking challenge than did the participants in the Attention Control Condition (ACC) group. Moreover, blind raters judged the speeches of those in the AMP group as better than those in the ACC group. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that attention plays a causal role in the maintenance of social anxiety.
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