A systematic review and meta-analysis of experimental methods for modulating intrusive memories following lab-analogue trauma exposure in non-clinical populations
A systematic review and meta-analysis of experimental methods for modulating intrusive memories following lab-analogue trauma exposure in non-clinical populations
Experiencing trauma leads to intrusive memories (IMs), a hallmark symptom of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which also occurs transdiagnostically. Understanding why IMs increase or decrease is pivotal in developing interventions to support mental health. In this preregistered meta-analysis (PROSPERO: CRD42021224835), we included 134 articles (131 techniques, 606 effect sizes and 12,074 non-clinical participants) to investigate how experimental techniques alter IM frequency, intrusion-related distress and symptoms arising from lab-analogue trauma exposure. Eligible articles were identified by searching eight databases until 12 December 2023. To test potential publication biases, we employed methods including Egger’s test and three-parameter selection models. We employed three-level multilevel modelling and meta-regressions to examine whether and how experimental techniques would modulate IM frequency and associated outcomes. Results showed that techniques (behavioural, pharmacological, neuromodulation) significantly reduced intrusion frequency (g = 0.16, 95% confidence interval [0.09, 0.23]). Notably, techniques aimed to reduce IMs also ameliorated intrusion-related distress and symptoms, while techniques that increased IMs exacerbated these related outcomes, thus highlighting IM’s centrality in PTSD-like symptoms. Techniques tapping into mental imagery processing (for example, trauma reminder followed by playing Tetris) reduced intrusions when administered immediately after, or at a delayed time after trauma. Although our meta-analysis is limited to symptoms induced by lab-analogue trauma exposure, some lab-based results have now generalized to real-world trauma and IMs, highlighting the promising utility of lab-analogue trauma paradigms for intervention development.
1968-1987
Varma, Mohith M.
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Zeng, Shengzi
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Singh, Laura
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Holmes, Emily A.
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Huang, Jingyun
556fc1b2-db4b-416e-a928-fd2bbdc72a21
Chiu, Man Hey
97a90cb5-1a6e-4d1c-b2ed-9c183528d4a6
Hu, Xiaoqing
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1 October 2024
Varma, Mohith M.
00cd73d1-b1c8-402b-bb7f-994a416a281c
Zeng, Shengzi
eb227693-701b-4d0a-a10a-b0a51a6e75f8
Singh, Laura
1d79dded-61a6-4874-a333-470e169a6100
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Huang, Jingyun
556fc1b2-db4b-416e-a928-fd2bbdc72a21
Chiu, Man Hey
97a90cb5-1a6e-4d1c-b2ed-9c183528d4a6
Hu, Xiaoqing
2d6afc64-30f0-437b-a9a7-a2a06ae381ec
Varma, Mohith M., Zeng, Shengzi, Singh, Laura, Holmes, Emily A., Huang, Jingyun, Chiu, Man Hey and Hu, Xiaoqing
(2024)
A systematic review and meta-analysis of experimental methods for modulating intrusive memories following lab-analogue trauma exposure in non-clinical populations.
Nature Human Behaviour, 8 (10), .
(doi:10.1038/s41562-024-01956-y).
Abstract
Experiencing trauma leads to intrusive memories (IMs), a hallmark symptom of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which also occurs transdiagnostically. Understanding why IMs increase or decrease is pivotal in developing interventions to support mental health. In this preregistered meta-analysis (PROSPERO: CRD42021224835), we included 134 articles (131 techniques, 606 effect sizes and 12,074 non-clinical participants) to investigate how experimental techniques alter IM frequency, intrusion-related distress and symptoms arising from lab-analogue trauma exposure. Eligible articles were identified by searching eight databases until 12 December 2023. To test potential publication biases, we employed methods including Egger’s test and three-parameter selection models. We employed three-level multilevel modelling and meta-regressions to examine whether and how experimental techniques would modulate IM frequency and associated outcomes. Results showed that techniques (behavioural, pharmacological, neuromodulation) significantly reduced intrusion frequency (g = 0.16, 95% confidence interval [0.09, 0.23]). Notably, techniques aimed to reduce IMs also ameliorated intrusion-related distress and symptoms, while techniques that increased IMs exacerbated these related outcomes, thus highlighting IM’s centrality in PTSD-like symptoms. Techniques tapping into mental imagery processing (for example, trauma reminder followed by playing Tetris) reduced intrusions when administered immediately after, or at a delayed time after trauma. Although our meta-analysis is limited to symptoms induced by lab-analogue trauma exposure, some lab-based results have now generalized to real-world trauma and IMs, highlighting the promising utility of lab-analogue trauma paradigms for intervention development.
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Published date: 1 October 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 508181
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508181
ISSN: 2397-3374
PURE UUID: 1716b556-3821-41b9-a5f3-955bbc64afec
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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2026 17:38
Last modified: 17 Jan 2026 03:45
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Author:
Mohith M. Varma
Author:
Shengzi Zeng
Author:
Laura Singh
Author:
Emily A. Holmes
Author:
Jingyun Huang
Author:
Man Hey Chiu
Author:
Xiaoqing Hu
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