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Browsing by Author "Aaron J. Fisher"

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    Publication
    Network analyses of ecological momentary emotion and avoidance assessments before and after cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety disorders
    (2024)
    Laura E. Meine
    ;
    Miriam Müller-Bardorff
    ;
    Dominique Recher
    ;
    Christina Paersch
    ;
    Ava Schulz
    ;
    Tobias Spiller
    ;
    Isaac Galatzer-Levy
    ;
    Tobias Kowatsch  
    ;
    Aaron J. Fisher
    ;
    Birgit Kleim
    Negative emotions and associated avoidance behaviors are core symptoms of anxiety. Current treatments aim to resolve dysfunctional coupling between them. However, precise interactions between emotions and avoidance in patients’ everyday lives and changes from pre- to post-treatment remain unclear. We analyzed data from a randomized controlled trial where patients with anxiety disorders underwent 16 sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Fifty-six patients (68 % female, age: M = 33.31, SD = 12.45) completed ecological momentary assessments five times a day on 14 consecutive days before and after treatment, rating negative emotions and avoidance behaviors experienced within the past 30 min. We computed multilevel vector autoregressive models to investigate contemporaneous and time-lagged associations between anxiety, depression, anger, and avoidance behaviors within patients, separately at pre- and post-treatment. We examined pre-post changes in network density and avoidance centrality, and related these metrics to changes in symptom severity. Network density significantly decreased from pre- to post-treatment, indicating that after therapy, mutual interactions between negative emotions and avoidance were attenuated. Specifically, contemporaneous associations between anxiety and avoidance observed before CBT were no longer significant at post-treatment. Effects of negative emotions on avoidance assessed at a later time point (avoidance instrength) decreased, but not significantly. Reduction in avoidance instrength positively correlated with reduction in depressive symptom severity, meaning that as patients improved, they were less likely to avoid situations after experiencing negative emotions. Our results elucidate mechanisms of successful CBT observed in patients’ daily lives and may help improve and personalize CBT to increase its effectiveness.
    Type:journal article
    Journal:Journal of Anxiety Disorders
    Volume:106
    DOI:10.1016/j.janxdis.2024.102914
    URI:https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/120654

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