A cognitively demanding working-memory intervention enhances extinction
Access DataAbstract
Improving extinction learning has the potential to optimize psychotherapy for persistent anxiety-related disorders. Recent findings show that extinction learning can be improved with a cognitively demanding eye-movement intervention. It is, however, unclear whether [1] any cognitively-demanding task can enhance extinction, or whether it is limited to eye movements, and [2] the effectiveness of such an intervention can be enhanced by increasing cognitive load. Participants (n = 102, n = 75 included in the final sample) completed a Pavlovian threat conditioning paradigm across two days. One group underwent standard extinction (Control), a second group underwent extinction paired with a 1-back working memory task (Low-Load), and a third group underwent extinction paired with a 2-back working memory task (High-Load). We found that the conditioned response during extinction was reduced for both the Low-Load and the High-Load groups compared to the Control group. This reduction persisted during recovery the following day when no working memory task was executed. Finally, we found that within the High-Load group, participants with lower accuracy scores on the 2-back task (i.e., for who the task was more difficult) had a stronger reduction in the conditioned response. We did not observe this relationship within the Low-Load group. Our findings suggest that cognitive load induced by a working memory intervention embedded during extinction reduces persistent threat responses.
ID 220
Authors
Lycia D. De Voogd, Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY, 10003, USA Elizabeth A. Phelps, Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 02138, USA
Year
2020
DOI of Publication
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-63811-0
Persistent Identifier to Dataset
https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/R25F4
Where was the data collected?
New York University, New York, USA
How to Cite
de Voogd, L., & Phelps, E. A. (2025, December 8). A cognitively demanding working-memory intervention enhances extinction. https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/R25F4
Participant Information
Participant Age
Participant Sex
Experimental Group
One group underwent standard extinction (Control), a second group underwent extinction paired with a 1-back working memory task (Low-Load), and a third group underwent extinction paired with a 2-back working memory task (High-Load).