Motion effects on intrusion development
Motion effects on intrusion development
Analogue studies on intrusion development have found that visuospatial tasks performed during the encoding of aversive information reduce subsequent intrusion development. However, these studies cannot rule out a physical explanation in terms of simple movement. In the current study we addressed this issue. Healthy participants viewed an aversive film while performing a visuospatial movement task, a configurational movement task, or no task. Intrusive images from the film were reported in a diary during the week following film viewing. In line with an information-processing account of posttraumatic stress disorder, intrusion frequency was significantly reduced by the visuospatial movement task but not the configurational movement task compared to no task. This finding supports the role of visuospatial processing specifically in intrusion development.
73-82
Krans, Julie
9f669542-c6ce-4921-ab5c-9be75cb53bcc
Naring, Gerard
5478cab5-071a-405c-a05f-ab485bd8b320
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Becker, Eni S.
66228ef7-c621-4b1d-8d7d-959d6dca6ef3
Krans, Julie
9f669542-c6ce-4921-ab5c-9be75cb53bcc
Naring, Gerard
5478cab5-071a-405c-a05f-ab485bd8b320
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Becker, Eni S.
66228ef7-c621-4b1d-8d7d-959d6dca6ef3
Krans, Julie, Naring, Gerard, Holmes, Emily A. and Becker, Eni S.
(2010)
Motion effects on intrusion development.
Journal of Trauma & Dissociation, 11 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/15299730903318483).
Abstract
Analogue studies on intrusion development have found that visuospatial tasks performed during the encoding of aversive information reduce subsequent intrusion development. However, these studies cannot rule out a physical explanation in terms of simple movement. In the current study we addressed this issue. Healthy participants viewed an aversive film while performing a visuospatial movement task, a configurational movement task, or no task. Intrusive images from the film were reported in a diary during the week following film viewing. In line with an information-processing account of posttraumatic stress disorder, intrusion frequency was significantly reduced by the visuospatial movement task but not the configurational movement task compared to no task. This finding supports the role of visuospatial processing specifically in intrusion development.
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 April 2009
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 January 2010
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 507860
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507860
ISSN: 1529-9732
PURE UUID: 8b54af2a-903f-43e7-911d-43a7ba562389
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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2026 22:32
Last modified: 08 Jan 2026 03:28
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Author:
Julie Krans
Author:
Gerard Naring
Author:
Emily A. Holmes
Author:
Eni S. Becker
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