Interpretation Modification Program for Social Phobia (SP Interp)
Social Anxiety Disorder, Social Phobia
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Social Anxiety Disorder focused on measuring Social Anxiety, Information Processing, Interpretation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Principle DSM-IV-TR (APA, 2000) Diagnosis of social phobia - Generalized Type (GSP)
Exclusion Criteria:
- No change in medication type or dosage twelve weeks prior to initiating treatment
- No current psychotherapy
- No evidence of suicidal intent
- No evidence of substance abuse in the last 6 months
- No evidence of current or past schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or organic mental disorder
Sites / Locations
- San Diego State University
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Placebo Comparator
Interpretation Modification Program
Interpretation Control Condition
The IMP procedure was identical to the word-sentence association paradigm (WSAP; Beard & Amir, 2009) except participants received feedback about their responses. Participants received positive feedback when they endorsed benign interpretations or rejected threat interpretations of the ambiguous sentences on 100% of trials and negative feedback when they endorsed threat interpretations or rejected benign interpretations on 100% of trials. This feedback manipulation was intended to reinforce a benign interpretation bias and extinguish the threat interpretation bias. Participants completed two blocks of 110 training trials in each session. Participants who completed Set A during the WSAP assessment saw Set B during the IMP and vice versa. Each IMP session lasted approximately 20 min.
The ICC was identical to the IMP, except that participants received positive feedback when they endorsed threat interpretations on half (50%) of the trials and negative feedback when they endorsed threat interpretations for the remaining half (50%) of trials. This frequency was the same for benign interpretations. Thus, the control group was reinforced equally for making threat and benign interpretations. The ICC was not intended to change interpretation significantly in either direction.