Cognitive bias modification of interpretations: A viable treatment for child and adolescent anxiety?
Anxiety disorders in children and adolescents are common and impairing. As many patients do not benefit from – or have difficulties accessing – frontline treatments, novel, effective and easy-to-deliver interventions are needed. Cognitive Bias Modification of Interpretations (CBM-I) training has bee...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behaviour research and therapy 2013-10, Vol.51 (10), p.614-622 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Anxiety disorders in children and adolescents are common and impairing. As many patients do not benefit from – or have difficulties accessing – frontline treatments, novel, effective and easy-to-deliver interventions are needed. Cognitive Bias Modification of Interpretations (CBM-I) training has been used to treat adult anxiety disorders. CBM-I methods train individuals to endorse benign rather than negative resolutions of ambiguous cues. Developmental extensions of CBM-I are important for several reasons. First, implementing CBM-I in symptomatic children and adolescents may facilitate early preventative gains. Second, as training uses simple learning mechanisms, CBM-I may reflect a developmentally-suitable strategy for shaping adaptive processing styles. Third, as this age range involves protracted neurocognitive maturation and associated plasticity, administering CBM-I early could drive powerful, long-lasting benefits for emotional development. Finally, data from CBM-I studies could inform the cognitive mechanisms involved in the genesis of early-emerging anxiety. This paper provides the first organised review of CBM-I studies conducted in children and adolescents, and contains suggestions for future research that may help realise the therapeutic potential of early CBM-I interventions.
•Training benign interpretations has been used to treat adult anxiety problems.•Extending these training packages to anxious youth may be beneficial.•Studies to date suggest that benign interpretations can be trained in this age group.•Outstanding questions to realise the therapeutic benefits of training are discussed. |
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ISSN: | 0005-7967 1873-622X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.brat.2013.07.001 |