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Combined cognitive modification and cognitive behaviour therapy on social anxiety

Frank Holland, Patrick Stanely

The goal of this study is to see if combining Cognitive Bias Modification For Interpretative Biases (CBM-I) with Computerised Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (C-CBT) can improve interpretation biases and reduce social anxiety. Forty students with social anxiety were randomly allocated to one of two groups: intervention (positive CBM-I + C-CBT) or active control (neutral CBM-I + C-CBT). Pre-test assessments of social anxiety, interpretive bias, cognitive distortions, and social and job adjustment were completed by participants. They were given six 30-minute web-based therapies, one each day, including three sessions of either positive or neutral CBM-I and three sessions of C-CBT. Participants completed the baseline measurements at the post-test and two-week follow-up. A positive CBM-I + C-CBT combination elicited fewer negative interpretations of ambiguous situations than a neutral CBM-I + C-CBT combination. Both positive CBM-I + C-CBT and neutral CBM-I + C-CBT reduced social anxiety and cognitive distortions, as well as enhancing work and social adjustment, according to the findings. The positive CBM-I + C-CBT condition, on the other hand, had larger effect sizes than the control. When compared to the neutral CBM-I + C-CBT condition, adding positive CBM-I to C-CBT improved the training effects on social anxiety, cognitive distortions, and social and job adjustment.

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協会、団体、大学向けのピアレビュー出版 pulsus-health-tech
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