Deakin University
Browse

Brief Repeated Attention Training for Psychological Distress: Findings from Two Experiments

Download (604.4 kB)
Version 2 2025-09-09, 00:37
Version 1 2025-08-13, 03:31
journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-09, 00:37 authored by David SkvarcDavid Skvarc, Shannon HyderShannon Hyder, Laetitia Leary, Shahni Watts, Marcus Seecamp, Lewis Burns, Alexa HayleyAlexa Hayley
Psychological distress is understood to be maintained by attention. We performed two experiments examining the impact of attention training (AT) on psychological distress symptoms. Experiment one (N = 336) investigated what effects might be detected in a simple experimental design with longitudinal measurements, while experiment two (N = 214) examined whether using a different emotional stimulus could induce an immediate anxiolytic effect in response to AT. Attentional biases were operationalized as the target search latency correlated with mood and psychological distress scores. While limited evidence of attentional biases was found in participants with higher mood distress, correlations emerged in the experimental conditions at day thirty, indicating a relationship between task latency, stress, and changes in depression (experimental one). We found no immediate between–within-group differences in outcome when including different emotional stimuli (experiment two). Despite attentional biases being less apparent in community samples, attentional training for bias modification was effective in eliciting positive biases, leading to improved mood. Notably, participants in the control condition reported the greatest mood and psychological distress improvements, whereas changes in the experimental condition primarily pertained to attentional biases. Taken together, these findings suggest that AT tasks can improve distress, but not through changes in attentional biases.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.

Location

Basel, Switzerland

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Behavioral Sciences

Volume

15

Article number

1052

ISSN

2076-328X

eISSN

2076-328X

Issue

8

Publisher

MDPI