Alcohol Dependence Clinical Trial
Official title:
Mechanisms Underlying the Approach and Avoidance Task (AAT) in Alcoholic Inpatients
The approach and avoidance task (AAT) has evolved as a promising treatment add-on in the
realm of psychology. Certain psychiatric diseases, such as behavioural addictions, social
anxiety disorder, and arachnophobia, are characterized by a dysfunctional tendency to either
approach or avoid disease-specific objects. This tendency can be measured by means of the
approach and avoidance task. In this so-called diagnostic AAT participants are instructed to
react upon the format or the frame colour of a picture. For instance, pictures have to be
pushed away if they are presented in landscape format and pulled towards oneself if they are
presented in portrait format (or vice versa). Hence, the format (or the frame colour) becomes
the task-relevant dimension, whereas the content of the picture becomes the task-irrelevant
dimension. However, what generally becomes obvious in the psychiatric diseases mentioned
above is that the task-irrelevant dimension (picture content) exerts an influence on reaction
times. For instance, alcoholic patients are generally faster to respond if alcoholic pictures
are presented in a format requiring them to pull towards themselves and slower to respond if
alcoholic pictures are shown in the format requiring them to push away a joystick. This
behavioural tendency has been termed an approach bias for alcohol.
In order to counteract these dysfunctional approach or avoidance tendencies, an AAT-training
has been developed. In this training participants/patients learn to either avoid or approach
disease-specific objects. Alcohol-dependent patients, for instance, learn to avoid
alcohol-related pictures by pushing or swiping the image away. It has been shown that these
trainings can enhance treatment outcome (e.g. lower relapse rates) among alcohol-addicted
patients (Wiers, Eberl, Rinck, Becker, & Lindenmeyer, 2011). The aim of the current study is
to test whether the avoidance gesture is as important as suggested by the AAT's name or
whether inhibiting the urge to approach alcoholic content might be enough to bring about the
effect.
The approach and avoidance task (AAT) has turned out as both a promising diagnostic tool as
well as treatment add-on in psychological science. The AAT constitutes one form of cognitive
bias modification (CBM), which has been shown to be particularly effective in the field of
behavioral addictions, such as alcohol addiction (Eberl et al., 2013; Wiers et al., 2011).
The general logic underlying the AAT is to carry out actions that are either compatible or
incompatible with an individual's action tendencies. For instance, alcohol addicted patients
tend to approach alcohol related stimuli faster than control pictures (i.e. soft drink
stimuli), when they are instructed to react upon the format of a picture and not to its'
content. This tendency of comparatively faster approaching and slower avoiding
alcohol-related stimuli than soft drink content has been termed an approach bias for alcohol.
The AAT as a therapeutic tool tries to counteract or at least to attenuate approach or
avoidance biases by instructing patients to carry out approach and avoidance gestures that
are in conflict with an individual's acquired action tendencies.
Whereas the general effectiveness of the AAT as a clinical intervention has been demonstrated
several times, little is known about possible mechanisms that might subserve these effects.
Therefore, the current study is dedicated to shed some light on one such potential mechanism,
i.e. the role of the avoidance gesture within the alcohol-AAT.
As already suggested by the name of the AAT, the avoidance gesture seems to be a key
ingredient in bringing about therapeutic effects. However, recent empirical evidence has
brought about some interesting findings, giving rise to an alternative explanation.
A study by Kühn et al. (2017), contrary to common-held beliefs, indicated that inhibition
capacity can be trained. Inhibition, in turn, consistently has been linked to psychopathology
and all kinds of behavioural addictions (Smith, Mattick, Jamadar, & Iredale, 2014). The game
by Kühn et al. (2017) used to train inhibition resembled the AAT in several ways, e.g.
certain stimuli appearing on a treadmill had to be collected by swiping towards oneself and
others had to be ignored and the objects slowly disappeared. The latter element contrasts
with the AAT, since the ignored objects don't have to be pushed away. However, it resembles
the AAT in the sense that in both cases stimuli slowly fade out of the screen and eventually
disappear. These parallel let to the assumption that a new form of the alcohol AAT training
might be equally effective in lowering relapse rates among alcoholic patients. More
precisely, within the newly conceptualized AAT training patients are instructed to inhibit
the urge to respond in response to alcohol-related content and to observe the stimuli fading
out of the screen. In contrast, to the classical AAT training this zooming out of alcoholic
stimuli is not conditional on an avoidance gesture, i.e. swiping/pushing away the stimulus.
It is hypothesized that compared to a control group, in which alcohol and soft drink stimuli
have to be swiped to the left and right, both the classical AAT-and the inhibition group will
show lower relapse rates and approach biases after the intervention, i.e. a training period
of three weeks. No intergroup differences in terms of relapse rates and alcohol-related
approach bias are expected for the classical AAT group and the inhibition group.
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