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Journal Article

Citation

Dreyer-Oren SE, Clerkin EM, Edwards CB, Teachman BA, Steinman SA. J. Behav. Ther. Exp. Psychiatry 2018; 62: 1-6.

Affiliation

West Virginia University, 1124 Life Sciences Building, P.O. Box 6040, Morgantown, WV, 26506, USA. Electronic address: shari.steinman@mail.wvu.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jbtep.2018.08.001

PMID

30145408

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: People who are afraid of heights may have a perceptual bias, such that they see heights as higher than they truly are. The current study tested if there is a causal relationship between treatments for height fear and changes in perceptual bias.

METHODS: Specifically, the effects on perceptual bias following three height fear interventions (exposure, cognitive bias modification for interpretations, and a combination of exposure and cognitive bias modification) and a control condition were examined in individuals with an extreme fear of heights (N = 107).

RESULTS: Results provided preliminary evidence that some height fear interventions reduce perceptual bias. Specifically, participants that completed exposure had a significant decrease in perceptual bias, and participants in the cognitive bias modification and combination conditions had decreases in perceptual bias at the level of non-significant trends, while no reduction occurred for the control condition. LIMITATIONS: Limitations of this study include that the hypothesis was largely informed by data from a parent study and that the effect sizes were small; thus, replicating these results is warranted.

CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that there may be a causal relationship between height fear treatments and altered perception of heights.

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Acrophobia; Cognitive bias modification; Exposure; Height fear; Perceptual bias

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