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Developing thinking around mental health science: the example of intrusive, emotional mental imagery after psychological trauma

Developing thinking around mental health science: the example of intrusive, emotional mental imagery after psychological trauma
Developing thinking around mental health science: the example of intrusive, emotional mental imagery after psychological trauma
Introduction: One route to advancing psychological treatments is to harness mental health science, a multidisciplinary approach including individuals with lived experience and end users (e.g., Holmes, E. A., Craske, M. G., & Graybiel, A. M. (2014). Psychological treatments: A call for mental-health science. Nature, 511(7509), 287–289. doi:10.1038/511287a). While early days, we here illustrate a line of research explored by our group—intrusive imagery-based memories after trauma.

Method/Results: We illustrate three possible approaches through which mental health science may stimulate thinking around psychological treatment innovation. First, focusing on single/specific target symptoms rather than full, multifaceted psychiatric diagnoses (e.g., intrusive trauma memories rather than all of posttraumatic stress disorder). Second, investigating mechanisms that can be modified in treatment (treatment mechanisms), rather than those which cannot (e.g., processes only linked to aetiology). Finally, exploring novel ways of delivering psychological treatment (peer-/self-administration), given the prevalence of mental health problems globally, and the corresponding need for effective interventions that can be delivered at scale and remotely for example at times of crisis (e.g., current COVID-19 pandemic).

Conclusions: These three approaches suggest options for potential innovative avenues through which mental health science may be harnessed to recouple basic and applied research and transform treatment development.
1354-6805
348-363
Singh, Laura
1d79dded-61a6-4874-a333-470e169a6100
Espinosa, Lisa
9d88a6e7-2196-47dd-ad7a-60607b0dbe5a
Ji, Julie L.
17278c33-f357-4588-ba03-a671cc20f833
Moulds, Michelle L.
df022906-d599-4e2f-933a-7e0b292214d4
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Singh, Laura
1d79dded-61a6-4874-a333-470e169a6100
Espinosa, Lisa
9d88a6e7-2196-47dd-ad7a-60607b0dbe5a
Ji, Julie L.
17278c33-f357-4588-ba03-a671cc20f833
Moulds, Michelle L.
df022906-d599-4e2f-933a-7e0b292214d4
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469

Singh, Laura, Espinosa, Lisa, Ji, Julie L., Moulds, Michelle L. and Holmes, Emily A. (2020) Developing thinking around mental health science: the example of intrusive, emotional mental imagery after psychological trauma. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 25 (5), 348-363. (doi:10.1080/13546805.2020.1804845).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: One route to advancing psychological treatments is to harness mental health science, a multidisciplinary approach including individuals with lived experience and end users (e.g., Holmes, E. A., Craske, M. G., & Graybiel, A. M. (2014). Psychological treatments: A call for mental-health science. Nature, 511(7509), 287–289. doi:10.1038/511287a). While early days, we here illustrate a line of research explored by our group—intrusive imagery-based memories after trauma.

Method/Results: We illustrate three possible approaches through which mental health science may stimulate thinking around psychological treatment innovation. First, focusing on single/specific target symptoms rather than full, multifaceted psychiatric diagnoses (e.g., intrusive trauma memories rather than all of posttraumatic stress disorder). Second, investigating mechanisms that can be modified in treatment (treatment mechanisms), rather than those which cannot (e.g., processes only linked to aetiology). Finally, exploring novel ways of delivering psychological treatment (peer-/self-administration), given the prevalence of mental health problems globally, and the corresponding need for effective interventions that can be delivered at scale and remotely for example at times of crisis (e.g., current COVID-19 pandemic).

Conclusions: These three approaches suggest options for potential innovative avenues through which mental health science may be harnessed to recouple basic and applied research and transform treatment development.

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Accepted/In Press date: 26 July 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 August 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507814
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507814
ISSN: 1354-6805
PURE UUID: 16d15227-91b6-4d5a-9dd4-d66929ca56fb
ORCID for Emily A. Holmes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7319-3112

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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2026 17:54
Last modified: 10 Jan 2026 05:07

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Contributors

Author: Laura Singh
Author: Lisa Espinosa
Author: Julie L. Ji
Author: Michelle L. Moulds
Author: Emily A. Holmes ORCID iD

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