When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.

A lack of behavioural engagement in health promotion or disease prevention is a problem across many health domains. In these cases where people face a genuine danger, a reduced focus on threat and low levels of anxiety or worry are maladaptive in terms of promoting protection or prevention behaviour...

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Main Authors: Lies Notebaert, Jessica Chrystal, Patrick J F Clarke, Emily A Holmes, Colin MacLeod
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3885669?pdf=render
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author Lies Notebaert
Jessica Chrystal
Patrick J F Clarke
Emily A Holmes
Colin MacLeod
author_facet Lies Notebaert
Jessica Chrystal
Patrick J F Clarke
Emily A Holmes
Colin MacLeod
author_sort Lies Notebaert
collection DOAJ
description A lack of behavioural engagement in health promotion or disease prevention is a problem across many health domains. In these cases where people face a genuine danger, a reduced focus on threat and low levels of anxiety or worry are maladaptive in terms of promoting protection or prevention behaviour. Therefore, it is possible that increasing the processing of threat will increase worry and thereby enhance engagement in adaptive behaviour. Laboratory studies have shown that cognitive bias modification (CBM) can increase or decrease anxiety and worry when increased versus decreased processing of threat is encouraged. In the current study, CBM for interpretation (CBM-I) is used to target engagement in sun protection behaviour. The goal was to investigate whether inducing a negative rather than a positive interpretation bias for physical threat information can enhance worry elicited when viewing a health campaign video (warning against melanoma skin cancer), and consequently lead to more adaptive behaviour (sun protection). Participants were successfully trained to either adopt a positive or negative interpretation bias using physical threat scenarios. However, contrary to expectations results showed that participants in the positive training condition reported higher levels of worry elicited by the melanoma video than participants in the negative training condition. Video elicited worry was, however, positively correlated with a measure of engagement in sun protection behaviour, suggesting that higher levels of worry do promote adaptive behaviour. These findings imply that more research is needed to determine under which conditions increased versus decreased processing of threat can drive adaptive worry. Various potential explanations for the current findings and suggestions for future research are discussed.
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spelling doaj.art-80acb42551a44471b6f629243f2deffd2022-12-22T01:36:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0191e8509210.1371/journal.pone.0085092When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.Lies NotebaertJessica ChrystalPatrick J F ClarkeEmily A HolmesColin MacLeodA lack of behavioural engagement in health promotion or disease prevention is a problem across many health domains. In these cases where people face a genuine danger, a reduced focus on threat and low levels of anxiety or worry are maladaptive in terms of promoting protection or prevention behaviour. Therefore, it is possible that increasing the processing of threat will increase worry and thereby enhance engagement in adaptive behaviour. Laboratory studies have shown that cognitive bias modification (CBM) can increase or decrease anxiety and worry when increased versus decreased processing of threat is encouraged. In the current study, CBM for interpretation (CBM-I) is used to target engagement in sun protection behaviour. The goal was to investigate whether inducing a negative rather than a positive interpretation bias for physical threat information can enhance worry elicited when viewing a health campaign video (warning against melanoma skin cancer), and consequently lead to more adaptive behaviour (sun protection). Participants were successfully trained to either adopt a positive or negative interpretation bias using physical threat scenarios. However, contrary to expectations results showed that participants in the positive training condition reported higher levels of worry elicited by the melanoma video than participants in the negative training condition. Video elicited worry was, however, positively correlated with a measure of engagement in sun protection behaviour, suggesting that higher levels of worry do promote adaptive behaviour. These findings imply that more research is needed to determine under which conditions increased versus decreased processing of threat can drive adaptive worry. Various potential explanations for the current findings and suggestions for future research are discussed.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3885669?pdf=render
spellingShingle Lies Notebaert
Jessica Chrystal
Patrick J F Clarke
Emily A Holmes
Colin MacLeod
When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.
PLoS ONE
title When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.
title_full When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.
title_fullStr When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.
title_full_unstemmed When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.
title_short When we should worry more: using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour.
title_sort when we should worry more using cognitive bias modification to drive adaptive health behaviour
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3885669?pdf=render
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