Intolerance of uncertainty predicts altered threat expectancy ratings during reinstatement
Intolerance of uncertainty predicts altered threat expectancy ratings during reinstatement
Intolerance of uncertainty (IU) is a transdiagnostic risk factor for psychiatric disorders, and plays an important role in fear and threat learning under uncertainty. The ‘reinstatement of fear/threat’ is an understudied phenomenon thought to represent clinical symptom relapse. Reinstatement of conditioned responding can be captured in the laboratory by presenting unsignaled presentations of an aversive unconditional stimulus. The present study investigated IU as a predictor of reinstatement effects, such that individuals higher in IU, relative to lower IU, would show larger reinstatement. Sixty-two participants completed the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale and provided threat expectancy ratings (i.e. certainty of receiving a shock) during a differential threat conditioning and extinction paradigm with reinstatement. Findings suggested a differential increase in threat expectancy ratings to both the threat and safety cue following reinstatement, although this effect was small and did not survive follow-up tests. Nevertheless, IU was a significant predictor of reinstatement to the threat cue but not the safety cue, although this effect was not in the expected direction. Specifically, higher IU was associated with reduced threat expectancy ratings post-reinstatement. These findings provide support for the limited literature demonstrating an important role for IU in reinstatement effects and should be investigated further.
conditioning, extinction, intolerance of uncertainty, reinstatement, return of fear
Zuj, Daniel V.
199ae68e-fac1-499b-bbd9-fc5113382df4
Dymond, Simon
7cb470af-cc21-4fff-bde5-2ead556288fe
Murray, Stuart B.
59d152ae-4343-41e0-b811-078a97419e0d
Thomas, Shaima
831afc4c-7a98-4009-b18a-f5d21b75809e
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
13 August 2022
Zuj, Daniel V.
199ae68e-fac1-499b-bbd9-fc5113382df4
Dymond, Simon
7cb470af-cc21-4fff-bde5-2ead556288fe
Murray, Stuart B.
59d152ae-4343-41e0-b811-078a97419e0d
Thomas, Shaima
831afc4c-7a98-4009-b18a-f5d21b75809e
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Zuj, Daniel V., Dymond, Simon, Murray, Stuart B., Thomas, Shaima and Morriss, Jayne
(2022)
Intolerance of uncertainty predicts altered threat expectancy ratings during reinstatement.
Journal of Experimental Psychopathology, 13 (3).
(doi:10.1177/20438087221112330).
Abstract
Intolerance of uncertainty (IU) is a transdiagnostic risk factor for psychiatric disorders, and plays an important role in fear and threat learning under uncertainty. The ‘reinstatement of fear/threat’ is an understudied phenomenon thought to represent clinical symptom relapse. Reinstatement of conditioned responding can be captured in the laboratory by presenting unsignaled presentations of an aversive unconditional stimulus. The present study investigated IU as a predictor of reinstatement effects, such that individuals higher in IU, relative to lower IU, would show larger reinstatement. Sixty-two participants completed the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale and provided threat expectancy ratings (i.e. certainty of receiving a shock) during a differential threat conditioning and extinction paradigm with reinstatement. Findings suggested a differential increase in threat expectancy ratings to both the threat and safety cue following reinstatement, although this effect was small and did not survive follow-up tests. Nevertheless, IU was a significant predictor of reinstatement to the threat cue but not the safety cue, although this effect was not in the expected direction. Specifically, higher IU was associated with reduced threat expectancy ratings post-reinstatement. These findings provide support for the limited literature demonstrating an important role for IU in reinstatement effects and should be investigated further.
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20438087221112330
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e-pub ahead of print date: 13 August 2022
Published date: 13 August 2022
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© The Author(s) 2022.
Keywords:
conditioning, extinction, intolerance of uncertainty, reinstatement, return of fear
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Local EPrints ID: 471650
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471650
ISSN: 2043-8087
PURE UUID: 72feddaa-2ac5-4489-83db-d308880262d2
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Date deposited: 15 Nov 2022 18:00
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Author:
Daniel V. Zuj
Author:
Simon Dymond
Author:
Stuart B. Murray
Author:
Shaima Thomas
Author:
Jayne Morriss
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