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Combining imagination and reason in the treatment of depression: A randomized controlled trial of internet-based cognitive-bias modification and internet-CBT for depression

Combining imagination and reason in the treatment of depression: A randomized controlled trial of internet-based cognitive-bias modification and internet-CBT for depression
Combining imagination and reason in the treatment of depression: A randomized controlled trial of internet-based cognitive-bias modification and internet-CBT for depression
Objective: Computerized cognitive-bias modification (CBM) protocols are rapidly evolving in experimental medicine yet might best be combined with Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (iCBT). No research to date has evaluated the combined approach in depression. The current randomized controlled trial aimed to evaluate both the independent effects of a CBM protocol targeting imagery and interpretation bias (CBM-I) and the combined effects of CBM-I followed by iCBT. Method: Patients diagnosed with a major depressive episode were randomized to an 11-week intervention (1 week/CBM-I + 10 weeks/iCBT; n = 38) that was delivered via the Internet with no face-to-face patient contact or to a wait-list control (WLC; n = 31). Results: Intent-to-treat marginal models using restricted maximum likelihood estimation demonstrated significant reductions in primary measures of depressive symptoms and distress corresponding to medium-large effect sizes (Cohen’s d = 0.62–2.40) following CBM-I and the combined (CBM-I + iCBT) intervention. Analyses demonstrated that the change in interpretation bias at least partially mediated the reduction in depression symptoms following CBM-I. Treatment superiority over the WLC was also evident on all outcome measures at both time points (Hedges gs = .59–.98). Significant reductions were also observed following the combined intervention on secondary measures associated with depression: disability, anxiety, and repetitive negative thinking (Cohen’s d = 1.51–2.23). Twenty-seven percent of patients evidenced clinically significant change following CBM-I, and this proportion increased to 65% following the combined intervention. Conclusions: The current study provides encouraging results of the integration of Internet-based technologies into an efficacious and acceptable form of treatment delivery.
0022-006X
Williams, A.D.
599a5855-ac47-4827-944a-03ff1c5302af
Blackwell, S.E.
5a9368ca-cb5b-453b-b5ed-229df2da25b1
Mackenzie, A.
99ffc73d-4037-4ad8-a48a-4ef603d1a778
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Andrews, G.
787beb7e-79c3-458f-b63f-4ad1a1fcb437
Williams, A.D.
599a5855-ac47-4827-944a-03ff1c5302af
Blackwell, S.E.
5a9368ca-cb5b-453b-b5ed-229df2da25b1
Mackenzie, A.
99ffc73d-4037-4ad8-a48a-4ef603d1a778
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Andrews, G.
787beb7e-79c3-458f-b63f-4ad1a1fcb437

Williams, A.D., Blackwell, S.E., Mackenzie, A., Holmes, E.A. and Andrews, G. (2013) Combining imagination and reason in the treatment of depression: A randomized controlled trial of internet-based cognitive-bias modification and internet-CBT for depression. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. (doi:10.1037/a0033247).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: Computerized cognitive-bias modification (CBM) protocols are rapidly evolving in experimental medicine yet might best be combined with Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (iCBT). No research to date has evaluated the combined approach in depression. The current randomized controlled trial aimed to evaluate both the independent effects of a CBM protocol targeting imagery and interpretation bias (CBM-I) and the combined effects of CBM-I followed by iCBT. Method: Patients diagnosed with a major depressive episode were randomized to an 11-week intervention (1 week/CBM-I + 10 weeks/iCBT; n = 38) that was delivered via the Internet with no face-to-face patient contact or to a wait-list control (WLC; n = 31). Results: Intent-to-treat marginal models using restricted maximum likelihood estimation demonstrated significant reductions in primary measures of depressive symptoms and distress corresponding to medium-large effect sizes (Cohen’s d = 0.62–2.40) following CBM-I and the combined (CBM-I + iCBT) intervention. Analyses demonstrated that the change in interpretation bias at least partially mediated the reduction in depression symptoms following CBM-I. Treatment superiority over the WLC was also evident on all outcome measures at both time points (Hedges gs = .59–.98). Significant reductions were also observed following the combined intervention on secondary measures associated with depression: disability, anxiety, and repetitive negative thinking (Cohen’s d = 1.51–2.23). Twenty-seven percent of patients evidenced clinically significant change following CBM-I, and this proportion increased to 65% following the combined intervention. Conclusions: The current study provides encouraging results of the integration of Internet-based technologies into an efficacious and acceptable form of treatment delivery.

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Accepted/In Press date: 30 April 2013
Published date: 12 May 2013

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507912
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507912
ISSN: 0022-006X
PURE UUID: db084638-51b8-4b9a-b975-4167c0dda300
ORCID for E.A. Holmes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7319-3112

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Date deposited: 07 Jan 2026 17:51
Last modified: 08 Jan 2026 03:28

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Contributors

Author: A.D. Williams
Author: S.E. Blackwell
Author: A. Mackenzie
Author: E.A. Holmes ORCID iD
Author: G. Andrews

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