AI Article Synopsis

  • - Tic disorders involve involuntary motor or vocal tics and are believed to be linked to reducing unpleasant urges through negative reinforcement, which is the basis for therapies like habit reversal training (HRT) and exposure and response prevention (ERP).
  • - The study used advanced statistical models to analyze the relationship between urges and tics in eleven adults, finding significant variability in how individuals experienced this connection during free tics versus tic suppression.
  • - Results indicated that tic suppression did not effectively decrease urges for most participants, challenging existing notions in the biobehavioral model of tics and suggesting a need for further exploration of the urge-tic dynamics over time.

Article Abstract

Tic disorders are a class of neurodevelopmental disorders characterized by involuntary motor and/or vocal tics. It has been hypothesized that tics function to reduce aversive premonitory urges (i.e., negative reinforcement) and that suppression-based behavioral interventions such as habit reversal training (HRT) and exposure and response prevention (ERP) disrupt this process and facilitate urge reduction through habituation. However, previous findings regarding the negative reinforcement hypothesis and the effect of suppression on the urge-tic relationship have been inconsistent. The present study applied a dynamical systems framework and within-subject time-series autoregressive models to examine the temporal dynamics of urges and tics and assess whether their relationship changes over time. Eleven adults with tic disorders provided continuous urge ratings during separate conditions in which they were instructed to tic freely or to suppress tics. During the free-to-tic conditions, there was considerable heterogeneity across participants in whether and how the urge-tic relationship followed a pattern consistent with the automatic negative reinforcement hypothesis. Further, little evidence for within-session habituation was seen; tic suppression did not result in a reduction in premonitory urges for most participants. Analysis of broader urge change metrics did show significant disruption to the urge pattern during suppression, which has implications for the current biobehavioral model of tics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.beth.2023.08.010DOI Listing

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