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The influence of a visuospatial grounding task on intrusive images of a traumatic film

The influence of a visuospatial grounding task on intrusive images of a traumatic film
The influence of a visuospatial grounding task on intrusive images of a traumatic film
Nonclinical participants watched a trauma film under two processing conditions. During part of the film participants carried out a concurrent visuospatial grounding task consisting of the construction of shapes out of plasticine (modelling clay), while the rest of the film constituted a control, no task condition. The visuospatial task was predicted to selectively compete for processing resources required for intrusive image formation. As predicted, spontaneous intrusive images during the succeeding week were significantly less common from those parts of the film that coincided with the concurrent task. The task had no effect on levels of distress or peritraumatic dissociation, consistent with the hypothesis that intrusions were reduced because the task competed for resources necessary for encoding into an image-based memory system.
0005-7967
Stuart, A.D.P.
563d575b-cdcc-42ce-92b3-4579e35ae1ff
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Brewin, C.R.
55003522-1d9f-47e7-9aa0-0af2b7d26bcb
Stuart, A.D.P.
563d575b-cdcc-42ce-92b3-4579e35ae1ff
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Brewin, C.R.
55003522-1d9f-47e7-9aa0-0af2b7d26bcb

Stuart, A.D.P., Holmes, E.A. and Brewin, C.R. (2006) The influence of a visuospatial grounding task on intrusive images of a traumatic film. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 44 (4). (doi:10.1016/j.brat.2005.04.004).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Nonclinical participants watched a trauma film under two processing conditions. During part of the film participants carried out a concurrent visuospatial grounding task consisting of the construction of shapes out of plasticine (modelling clay), while the rest of the film constituted a control, no task condition. The visuospatial task was predicted to selectively compete for processing resources required for intrusive image formation. As predicted, spontaneous intrusive images during the succeeding week were significantly less common from those parts of the film that coincided with the concurrent task. The task had no effect on levels of distress or peritraumatic dissociation, consistent with the hypothesis that intrusions were reduced because the task competed for resources necessary for encoding into an image-based memory system.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 27 June 2006
Published date: 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507792
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507792
ISSN: 0005-7967
PURE UUID: b70d62b5-677d-4fda-847a-77a2d30cdd1a
ORCID for E.A. Holmes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7319-3112

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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2026 17:47
Last modified: 08 Jan 2026 03:28

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Contributors

Author: A.D.P. Stuart
Author: E.A. Holmes ORCID iD
Author: C.R. Brewin

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