Computerised exposure therapy for Spider Phobia - Effects of cardiac timing and interoceptive ability on subjective and behavioural outcomes.pdf (226.67 kB)
Computerized exposure therapy for Spider Phobia: Effects of cardiac timing and interoceptive ability on subjective and behavioral outcomes
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 15:32 authored by David R Watson, Sarah Garfinkel, Cassandra Gould van Praag, Daniel Willmott, Katherine Wong, Frances Meeten, Hugo CritchleyHugo CritchleyObjective: Spider phobia is a common form of anxiety disorder for which exposure therapy is an effective first-line treatment. Motivated by the observed modulation of threat processing by afferent cardiac signals; we tested the hypothesis that interoceptive information concerning cardiovascular arousal can influence the outcomes of computerised exposure therapy for spider phobia. Method: Fifty-three normal healthy participants with high spider phobia scores underwent one of three modified computerised exposure protocols, defined by the timing of exposure to brief spider stimuli within the cardiac cycle: Systole (during afferent baroreceptor firing); Diastole (during baroreceptor-quiescent interbeat interval); Random (non-contingent on cardiac cycle). Outcomes were judged on phobic and anxiety measures and physiological data (skin conductance). Subjects were also rated on interoceptive accuracy. Results: Mancova analysis showed that timing group affected the outcome measures (F(10,80)=2.405, p=0.015) and there was a group interaction with interoception ability (F(15,110)=1.808, p=0.045). Subjective symptom reduction (SPQ) was greatest in the Systolic group relative to the other two groups (Diastolic (t=3.115, ptukey=0.009); Random (t=2.438, ptukey=0.048), with greatest reductions in those participants with lower interoceptive accuracy. Behavioural aversion (BAT) reduced more in cardiac-contingent groups than the non-contingent (Random) group (Diastolic (t=3.295, ptukey=0.005); Systolic (t=2.602, ptukey=0.032). Physiological (SCR) responses remained strongest for spider stimuli presented at cardiac systole. Conclusion: Interoceptive information influences exposure benefit. The reduction in the subjective expression of fear/phobia is facilitated by ‘bottom-up’ afferent signals; while improvement in the behavioural expression is further dependent on ‘top-down’ representation of Interoceptive effects in spider phobia treatment self-related physiology (heart rhythm). Individual interoceptive differences moderate these effects, suggesting means to personalise therapy.
Funding
Cardiac control of fear in brain; G1120; EUROPEAN UNION; 324150 CCFIB
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
Psychosomatic MedicineISSN
0033-3174Publisher
Lippincott, Williams & WilkinsExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
81Page range
90-99Department affiliated with
- BSMS Publications
Research groups affiliated with
- Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science Publications
- Sussex Neuroscience Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes