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The effect of mindfulness training on extinction retention.

Scientific reports
January 1, 1970
Johannes Björkstrand et al. (7 authors)
Clinical TrialJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether mindfulness training (MFT) improves extinction retention of threat-related responses, potentially clarifying its role in treating anxiety and trauma-related disorders.

Results Summary

The MFT group showed reduced spontaneous recovery of threat-related arousal responses on day 2 compared to the waitlist group, but MFT had no effect on acquisition or extinction of conditioned responses on day 1. This suggests MFT may enhance emotional functioning by improving extinction retention.

Population

Healthy subjects (n=29, with 14 in the MFT group and 15 in the waitlist group).

Effective Dosage

4-week MFT intervention delivered via a smartphone app (specific dosage not detailed).

Duration

4 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (4)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
mindfulness training (MFT)
decrease
fear and anxiety related disorders
-
-
can be used to treat
#1
4-week MFT-intervention delivered through a smart-phone app
decrease
spontaneous recovery of threat related arousal responses
healthy subjects
-
displayed reduced
#2
MFT
no change
acquisition of conditioned responses
healthy subjects
-
did not have an effect on
#3
MFT
no change
extinction of conditioned responses
healthy subjects
-
did not have an effect on
#4
Abstract

Anxiety and trauma related disorders are highly prevalent, causing suffering and high costs for society. Current treatment strategies, although effective, only show moderate effect-sizes when compared to adequate control groups demonstrating a need to develop new forms of treatment or optimize existing ones. In order to achieve this, an increased understanding of what mechanisms are involved is needed. An emerging literature indicates that mindfulness training (MFT) can be used to treat fear and anxiety related disorders, but the treatment mechanisms are unclear. One hypothesis, largely based on findings from neuroimaging studies, states that MFT may improve extinction retention, but this has not been demonstrated empirically. To investigate this question healthy subjects either completed a 4-week MFT- intervention delivered through a smart-phone app (n = 14) or were assigned to a waitlist (n = 15). Subsequently, subjects participated in a two-day experimental protocol using pavlovian aversive conditioning, evaluating acquisition and extinction of threat-related responses on day 1, and extinction retention on day 2. Results showed that the MFT group displayed reduced spontaneous recovery of threat related arousal responses, as compared to the waitlist control group, on day 2. MFT did not however, have an effect on either the acquisition or extinction of conditioned responses day 1. This clarifies the positive effect of MFT on emotional functioning and could have implications for the treatment of anxiety and trauma related disorders.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdolescentAdultAgedAnxietyConditioning, PsychologicalExtinction, PsychologicalFearFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedMindfulnessWounds and Injuries
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations13
Citations/Year2.2
Relative Citation Ratio0.93
NIH Percentile47.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.69
Normalized Score0.66
Related Supplements
The effect of mindfulness training on extinction retention. | Panacea Index