AI Article Synopsis

  • - Socially anxious individuals have a tendency to focus on emotional stimuli, which can contribute to their anxiety. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) aims to reduce this attention bias and correct harmful beliefs associated with social anxiety.
  • - A study examined the effects of eight weeks of CBT on the neural processing of social anxiety by measuring brain activity (using event-related potentials) during a task designed to assess attention bias in 22 socially anxious participants and 29 healthy controls.
  • - Results showed that CBT significantly reduced anxiety levels and altered brain responses; specifically, there were changes in certain brain wave amplitudes that reflect early and later attention processes, indicating that CBT may be effective in modifying neurophysiological aspects of social anxiety.

Article Abstract

Background: Social anxious individuals show attention bias towards emotional stimuli, this phenomenon is considered to be an important cause of anxiety generation and maintenance. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is a standard psychotherapy for social anxiety disorder. CBT decreases attention biases by correcting the maladaptive beliefs of socially anxious individuals, but it is not clear whether CBT alters neurophysiological features of socially anxious individuals at early automatic and/or late cognitive strategy stage of attentional processing.

Method: To address this knowledge gap, we collected pre-treatment event-related potential data of 22 socially anxious individuals while they performed a dot-probe task. These participants then received eight weeks of CBT, and post-treatment ERP data were collected after completion of CBT treatment. We also included 29 healthy controls and compared them with individuals with social anxiety to determine the neural mechanisms underlying the effectiveness of CBT.

Results: Participants' social anxiety level was significantly alleviated with CBT. ERP results revealed that (1) compared to pre-treatment phase, P1 amplitudes induced by probes significantly decreased at post-treatment phase, whereas P3 amplitudes increased at post-treatment phase; the P1 amplitudes induced by probes following happy-neutral face pairs in socially anxious individuals after treatment was significantly different with that in healthy controls; (2) amplitude of components elicited by face pairs did not change significantly between pre-treatment and post-treatment phases; (3) changes of Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale were positively correlated with changes of P1 amplitude, and negatively correlated with changes of N1 amplitude.

Limitations: Our sample was university students and lacked randomization, which limits the generalizability of the results.

Conclusion: The present results demonstrated that CBT may adjust cognitive strategies in the later stage of attentional processing, indicating by changed ERPs appeared in probe-presenting stage for social anxiety.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbtep.2024.101988DOI Listing

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