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Published Online: 20 January 2017

Gaze-Contingent Music Reward Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Abstract

Objective:

Patients with social anxiety disorder exhibit increased attentional dwelling on social threats, providing a viable target for therapeutics. This randomized controlled trial examined the efficacy of a novel gaze-contingent music reward therapy for social anxiety disorder designed to reduce attention dwelling on threats.

Method:

Forty patients with social anxiety disorder were randomly assigned to eight sessions of either gaze-contingent music reward therapy, designed to divert patients’ gaze toward neutral stimuli rather than threat stimuli, or to a control condition. Clinician and self-report measures of social anxiety were acquired pretreatment, posttreatment, and at 3-month follow-up. Dwell time on socially threatening faces was assessed during the training sessions and at pre- and posttreatment.

Results:

Gaze-contingent music reward therapy yielded greater reductions of symptoms of social anxiety disorder than the control condition on both clinician-rated and self-reported measures. Therapeutic effects were maintained at follow-up. Gaze-contingent music reward therapy, but not the control condition, also reduced dwell time on threat, which partially mediated clinical effects. Finally, gaze-contingent music reward therapy, but not the control condition, also altered dwell time on socially threatening faces not used in training, reflecting near-transfer training generalization.

Conclusions:

This is the first randomized controlled trial to examine a gaze-contingent intervention in social anxiety disorder. The results demonstrate target engagement and clinical effects. This study sets the stage for larger randomized controlled trials and testing in other emotional disorders.

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Supplementary Material

File (appi.ajp.2016.16080894.ds001.pdf)

Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 649 - 656
PubMed: 28103714

History

Received: 10 August 2016
Revision received: 27 October 2016
Accepted: 7 November 2016
Published online: 20 January 2017
Published in print: July 01, 2017

Keywords

  1. Cognitive Therapy
  2. Phobic Disorders
  3. Social Anxiety
  4. Eye Tracking
  5. Gaze-Contingency
  6. Attention Bias Modification
  7. Attention Allocation

Authors

Affiliations

Amit Lazarov, Ph.D. [email protected]
From the School of Psychological Sciences and the Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel; and the Section on Development and Affective Neuroscience, NIMH Intramural Research Program, Bethesda, Md.
Daniel S. Pine, M.D.
From the School of Psychological Sciences and the Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel; and the Section on Development and Affective Neuroscience, NIMH Intramural Research Program, Bethesda, Md.
Yair Bar-Haim, Ph.D.
From the School of Psychological Sciences and the Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel; and the Section on Development and Affective Neuroscience, NIMH Intramural Research Program, Bethesda, Md.

Notes

Address correspondence to Dr. Lazarov ([email protected]).

Competing Interests

The authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Funding Information

United States — Israel Binational Science Foundation: grant number 2013349

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