Intolerance of uncertainty is associated with heightened arousal during extinction learning and retention: preliminary evidence from a clinical sample with anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders
Intolerance of uncertainty is associated with heightened arousal during extinction learning and retention: preliminary evidence from a clinical sample with anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders
Background: uncertainty-related distress is considered a hallmark of anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorders (OCD). Previous research in community samples has demonstrated that individuals with high Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU), the tendency to find uncertainty aversive, display altered threat extinction learning and retention.
Methods: here, we conducted an exploratory secondary analysis of an existing dataset (Steinman et al., 2022) to examine the extent to which IU in a clinical sample with anxiety and OCD predicts threat extinction learning and retention. Participants with an anxiety disorder and/or OCD completed a differential threat learning task across two days (n = 27). Skin conductance response (SCR) was used as an index of conditioned responding.
Results: no significant effects of self-reported IU were observed for differential SCR during any of the experimental phases. However, higher self-reported IU, while controlling for trait anxiety, was specifically associated with greater SCR overall during same-day extinction training, next-day extinction training, and next-day reinstatement test.
Conclusions: such findings provide preliminary evidence that higher IU within clinical samples with anxiety and/or OCD may be associated with heightened arousal under uncertainty, and highlight IU as a promising treatment target for anxiety and OCD.
Anxiety, Intolerance of uncertainty, OCD, Skin conductance, Threat conditioning, Threat extinction
854-865
Morriss, Jayne
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Rodriguez-Sobstel, Claudia
db2933e9-aa12-4031-9687-2933bc8ab8f7
Steinman, Shari A.
51a9cf13-f7ed-4a3f-a9e6-0ec87b77514b
15 May 2024
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Rodriguez-Sobstel, Claudia
db2933e9-aa12-4031-9687-2933bc8ab8f7
Steinman, Shari A.
51a9cf13-f7ed-4a3f-a9e6-0ec87b77514b
Morriss, Jayne, Rodriguez-Sobstel, Claudia and Steinman, Shari A.
(2024)
Intolerance of uncertainty is associated with heightened arousal during extinction learning and retention: preliminary evidence from a clinical sample with anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders.
Cognitive Therapy and Research, 48 (5), .
(doi:10.1007/s10608-024-10491-z).
Abstract
Background: uncertainty-related distress is considered a hallmark of anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorders (OCD). Previous research in community samples has demonstrated that individuals with high Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU), the tendency to find uncertainty aversive, display altered threat extinction learning and retention.
Methods: here, we conducted an exploratory secondary analysis of an existing dataset (Steinman et al., 2022) to examine the extent to which IU in a clinical sample with anxiety and OCD predicts threat extinction learning and retention. Participants with an anxiety disorder and/or OCD completed a differential threat learning task across two days (n = 27). Skin conductance response (SCR) was used as an index of conditioned responding.
Results: no significant effects of self-reported IU were observed for differential SCR during any of the experimental phases. However, higher self-reported IU, while controlling for trait anxiety, was specifically associated with greater SCR overall during same-day extinction training, next-day extinction training, and next-day reinstatement test.
Conclusions: such findings provide preliminary evidence that higher IU within clinical samples with anxiety and/or OCD may be associated with heightened arousal under uncertainty, and highlight IU as a promising treatment target for anxiety and OCD.
Text
s10608-024-10491-z
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 May 2024
Published date: 15 May 2024
Keywords:
Anxiety, Intolerance of uncertainty, OCD, Skin conductance, Threat conditioning, Threat extinction
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 490784
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490784
ISSN: 0147-5916
PURE UUID: 976fc277-31e9-474f-81fa-33e049c7d0db
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Date deposited: 06 Jun 2024 16:43
Last modified: 03 Oct 2024 02:03
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Author:
Jayne Morriss
Author:
Claudia Rodriguez-Sobstel
Author:
Shari A. Steinman
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