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Secure attachment priming protects against relapse of fear in Young adults

Psychology

Secure attachment priming protects against relapse of fear in Young adults

M. Toumbelekis, B. J. Liddell, et al.

This research reveals that activating attachment figures can significantly reduce fear relapse following extinction, offering new insights into anxiety disorder treatments. Conducted by Metaxia Toumbelekis, Belinda J. Liddell, and Richard A. Bryant from the University of New South Wales, these findings suggest that attachment priming might enhance long-term safety memories critical in therapy.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that activating the attachment system attenuates fear learning. This study aimed to explore whether attachment priming can also impact on fear extinction processes, which underpin the management of anxiety disorders. In this study, 81 participants underwent a standard fear conditioning and extinction protocol on day 1 and returned 24 h later for an extinction recall and reinstatement test. Half the participants were primed to imagine their closest attachment figure prior to undergoing extinction training, while the other half were instructed to imagine a positive situation. Fear-potentiated startle and subjective expectancies of shock were measured as the primary indicators of fear. Attachment priming led to less relapse during the reinstatement test at the physiological but not subjective levels. These findings have translational potential to imply that activating awareness of attachment figures might augment long-term safety memories acquired in existing treatments to reduce relapse of fear.
Publisher
Translational Psychiatry
Published On
Nov 13, 2021
Authors
Metaxia Toumbelekis, Belinda J. Liddell, Richard A. Bryant
Tags
attachment system
fear extinction
anxiety disorders
fear learning
emotional regulation
psychological safety
priming effects
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