This study evaluates the effectiveness of a smartphone-delivered attention control training as a preventive intervention for remitted depressed patients. Additionally, the investigators aim to increase the effect of this CBM-intervention by adding a psychoeducation module (CBT-intervention). To test this aim, participants will be randomly assigned to one of three conditions: (1) an experimental training condition with prior psychoeducation, (2) an experimental training condition without prior psychoeducation, or (3) a placebo training condition serving as an active control condition.
According to different theories and empirical research, attention control for external information and cognitive control for internal information play a causal role in cognitive emotion regulation ability, a critically important factor in determining resilience. Recent studies regarding the more specific interplay among these mechanisms in depression highlight the importance of considering attention control in treating impaired emotion regulation processes. These studies tested an interactive attention control training, in which people learned to disentangle scrambled sentences ("life is my party a mess") in a positive way ("my life is a party") by receiving eye tracking-based feedback on attention for positive ("party") vs. negative information ("mess"). Results indicated that participants were better able to reinterpret negative pictures in a positive way. Moreover, reactive attentional and cognitive control (i.e., when actually being confronted with a challenging task or stressor) seem to be influenced by perceived control or expectancy regarding the ability to cope with future stressors (i.e., in anticipation of a challenging task or stressor). More specifically, low perceived control and negative expectation bias with respect to future emotion regulation ability have been shown to result in an increased need for actual control and decreased emotion regulation abilities when actually being confronted with stressors. Based on these findings, it could be assumed that the effects of attention control training - targeting actual controlled emotion regulation processes - may be improved by adding techniques that influence perceived control/expectancy of emotion regulation ability (e.g., psychoeducation). In the current study, the investigators aim to investigate whether an online based variant of the eye-gaze contingent attention training could be a promising intervention for relapse prevention in people vulnerable to depression. More specifically, the main aim is to explore whether an online-delivered attention control training can improve depressive symptoms and cognitive emotion regulation ability (e.g., reappraisal ability), thereby increasing resilience in the face of stress, in a RMD (remitted depressed) sample. In addition, it will be explored whether prior psychoeducation may increase this effect. In each condition, a smartphone training, consisting of 10 sessions of about 12 minutes each, will be administered to remitted depressed participants. The experimental condition will receive an attention training with gaze contingent feedback (OCAT), comprising an undirected interpretation task (instruction to unscramble as quickly as possible) as a baseline phase, followed by a positively directed interpretation task (instruction to unscramble always positive self-statements) as a modification phase (OCAT-only condition). The active placebo training will only receive the undirected interpretation task (modification phase identical to baseline phase) without mouse-gaze contingent feedback (OCAT-sham condition). Furthermore, an additional condition will combine the experimental training with a new psychoeducation session (OCAT-combo condition). This psychoeducation will focus on the role of attention processes in generating emotions. As the training tasks, this PSE-session will be self-administered and delivered in a computer-based format, including interactive graphics and video-recordings. Before (pre-test) and after the intervention (post-test), selective attention bias and emotion regulation will be measured to investigate transfer effects of training. Also, depressive symptomatology and related variables will be assessed at pre- and post-test, as well as at follow-up, 3 and 6 months after the training.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
online-contingent Attention Training without prior psychoeducation
Placebo version of Online contingent Attention Training without prior psychoeducation
Online contingent Attention Training with prior psychoeducation
Ghent University
Ghent, Oost-Vlaanderen, Belgium
Change in depression, anxiety, and stress
Measured by the 21-item version of the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scales (DASS-21)
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)
Change in rumination
Measured by the Ruminative Response Scale (RRS). This 22-item questionnaire provides a total rumination score (range: 22 - 88), as well as Brooding and Reflection subscale scores (range: 5 - 20). Brooding is characterized by a passive style of moody pondering and is the most maladaptive form of depressive rumination. Higher scores indicate a worse outcome.
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)
Change in attentional bias
Measured by an emotional dot-probe task
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period)
Change in reappraisal
Measured by the emotion regulation task: Average of two blind raters' scores of participants' reappraisal descriptions on a 5-point scale (0-No Description, 1-Not at all, 2-A little, 3-Good, 4-Very good) on participants' ability to reinterpret negative scenes (separately for the pre- and post-test emotion regulation tasks)
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period)
Change in negative emotions (after reappraisal)
Measured by the emotion regulation task: Average of negative mood ratings after using reappraisal
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period)
Change in (mal-)adaptive cognitive emotion regulation strategies
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.
Measured by the Cognitive Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (CERQ)
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)
Change in maladaptive cognitive emotion regulation strategies: State rumination
Measured by the Brief State Rumination Inventory (BSRI)
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)
Change in general functioning: Quality of life
Measured by the depression-specific 34-item (range: 0 - 34) Quality of Life in Depression Scale (QLDS). The QLDS consists of dichotomous response questions, with the response being either True/Not True or Yes/No. It is scored binomially (0-1) and high scores on the QLDS indicate a lower quality of life.
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)
Change in general functioning: Remission from depression
Measured by the 41-item Remission of Depression Questionnaire (RDQ) for which a high score is indicative for more psychopathology (range: 0 - 82).
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)
Change in general functioning: Resilience
Measured by the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC). The CD-RISC comprises of 25 items, each rated on a 5-point scale (0-4), with higher scores reflecting greater resilience.
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)
Treatment Credibility and Expectancy
Measured by the Credibility/Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ)
Time frame: Pre-test, Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period)
Change in motivation-related variables
Measured by the Intrinsic Motivation Inventory (IMI). Subscales: Interest/Enjoyment, Perceived Competence, Effort/Importance, Pressure/Tension, Value/Usefulness
Time frame: Post-test (immediately after the two week intervention period), Follow-up (3 and 6 months)