Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Changes in Selective Attentional Patterns Towards Emotional Stimuli by Using Eye-tracking Techniques: A New Intervention for Depression
Cognitive biases are a hallmark of depression but there is scarce research on whether these
biases can be directly modified by using specific cognitive training techniques.
The aim of this study will be targeting and modifying specifically relevant attention biases
in participants with subclinical depression using eye-tracking methodologies. This innovative
approach has been proposed as a promising future line of intervention in Attention Bias
Modification procedures (Koster & Hoorelbeke, 2015).
Recent findings suggest that depression is characterized by a double attentional bias (Duque
& Vazquez, 2015), More specifically, depressed individuals have difficulties both to
disengage from negative materials (e.g., sad faces) and to engage with positive materials
(e.g., happy faces). Thus, training procedures to change attentional biases should target
these two separate components.
The aim of this study will be to apply eye-tracking methods to modify specific components of
attentional bias in depression. Eye-tracking technology enables us to train attention by
following strict performance and time-based criteria as well as to specify the components of
attention (i.e., disengagement from negative information, engagement and maintenance in
positive information) to be targeted in the training, critical to providing a theory-driven
intervention (Koster, Baert et al., 2010). In the case of depression, there is also some
evidence from eye-tracking studies showing that recovery from an induced negative mood is
better when individuals spontaneously direct their gaze towards positive stimuli (Sanchez et
al., 2014). Thus extant evidence on attentional biases in depression suggest that
modification of these biases could be a fruitful way to change participants' mood.
Although initial positive results of ABM led some authors to propose it as an alternative
treatment for emotional disorders (Bar-Haim, 2010; MacLeod & Holmes, 2012), some recent
meta-analysis (Mogoase et al. 2014; Cristea et al., 2015) have reduced the enthusiasm of
those previous claims.Yet, it is likely that modest results of ABM procedures in depression
are, in part, based on flawed methodologies. The proposed study aims to rectify several
limitations of previous designs while opening a new strategy, based in training ocular
movements, to modify attentional patterns. With a series of methodological and conceptual
improvements (i.e., trial-by- trial feedback, use of different tasks to measure attentional
bias and to do the ABM, use of a yoked-group design to control for the time exposure to the
emotional stimuli in the control group, and use of a stress-test to measure transfer of the
training to a different task), it is expected that some limitations found in previous studies
can be overcome. The general aim of the study will be to train adaptive attentional biases
(i.e., training the maintenance of gaze towards positive stimuli). The use of the new ABM in
a sample of dysphoric participants will allow us to test if training visual selective
attention using eye-tracking methodology could be a promising venue for future ABM procedures
more solidly grounded on current theories of depression.
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