I doubt it is safe: a meta-analysis of self-reported intolerance of uncertainty and threat extinction training
I doubt it is safe: a meta-analysis of self-reported intolerance of uncertainty and threat extinction training
Background: intolerance of uncertainty (IU), the tendency to find uncertainty distressing, is an important transdiagnostic dimension in mental health disorders. Higher self-reported IU has been linked to poorer threat extinction training (i.e., the updating of threat to safe associations), a key process that is targeted in exposure-based therapies. However, it remains to be seen whether IU-related effects during threat extinction training are reliably and specifically driven by the IU construct or a particular subcomponent of the IU construct over other self-reported measures of anxiety.
Methods: a meta-analysis of studies from different laboratories (18 experiments; sample N = 1006) was conducted on associations between different variants of self-reported IU (i.e., 27-item, 12-item, inhibitory, and prospective subscales), trait anxiety, and threat extinction training via skin conductance response. The specificity of IU and threat extinction training was assessed against measures of trait anxiety.
Results: all the self-reported variants of IU, but not trait anxiety, were associated with threat extinction training via skin conductance response (i.e., continued responding to the old threat cue). Specificity was observed for the majority of self-reported variants of IU over trait anxiety.
Conclusions: the findings suggest that the IU construct broadly accounts for difficulties in threat extinction training and is specific over other measures of self-reported anxiety. These findings demonstrate the robustness and specificity of IU-related effects during threat extinction training and highlight potential opportunities for translational work to target uncertainty in therapies that rely on threat extinction principles such as exposure therapy.
171-179
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Wake, Shannon
b0425fcc-1bc7-4982-add5-e8affb055d50
Elizabeth, Charlotte
8d02633f-d5d6-469f-b4ae-09ff9c94af8e
van Reekum, Carien M.
56010ab6-5a14-4c5a-b463-eb2159b3684c
15 September 2021
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Wake, Shannon
b0425fcc-1bc7-4982-add5-e8affb055d50
Elizabeth, Charlotte
8d02633f-d5d6-469f-b4ae-09ff9c94af8e
van Reekum, Carien M.
56010ab6-5a14-4c5a-b463-eb2159b3684c
Morriss, Jayne, Wake, Shannon, Elizabeth, Charlotte and van Reekum, Carien M.
(2021)
I doubt it is safe: a meta-analysis of self-reported intolerance of uncertainty and threat extinction training.
Biological Psychiatry Global Open Science, 1 (3), .
(doi:10.1016/j.bpsgos.2021.05.011).
Abstract
Background: intolerance of uncertainty (IU), the tendency to find uncertainty distressing, is an important transdiagnostic dimension in mental health disorders. Higher self-reported IU has been linked to poorer threat extinction training (i.e., the updating of threat to safe associations), a key process that is targeted in exposure-based therapies. However, it remains to be seen whether IU-related effects during threat extinction training are reliably and specifically driven by the IU construct or a particular subcomponent of the IU construct over other self-reported measures of anxiety.
Methods: a meta-analysis of studies from different laboratories (18 experiments; sample N = 1006) was conducted on associations between different variants of self-reported IU (i.e., 27-item, 12-item, inhibitory, and prospective subscales), trait anxiety, and threat extinction training via skin conductance response. The specificity of IU and threat extinction training was assessed against measures of trait anxiety.
Results: all the self-reported variants of IU, but not trait anxiety, were associated with threat extinction training via skin conductance response (i.e., continued responding to the old threat cue). Specificity was observed for the majority of self-reported variants of IU over trait anxiety.
Conclusions: the findings suggest that the IU construct broadly accounts for difficulties in threat extinction training and is specific over other measures of self-reported anxiety. These findings demonstrate the robustness and specificity of IU-related effects during threat extinction training and highlight potential opportunities for translational work to target uncertainty in therapies that rely on threat extinction principles such as exposure therapy.
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Accepted/In Press date: 29 May 2021
Published date: 15 September 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 471652
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471652
PURE UUID: c9db5556-3bd0-4db6-93a1-020d11193f05
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Date deposited: 15 Nov 2022 18:02
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Author:
Jayne Morriss
Author:
Shannon Wake
Author:
Charlotte Elizabeth
Author:
Carien M. van Reekum
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