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Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response

INTRODUCTION: The administration of questionnaires presents an easy way of obtaining important knowledge about phobic patients. However, it is not well known how these subjective measurements correspond to the patient’s objective condition. Our study aimed to compare scores on questionnaires and ima...

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Autores principales: Landová, Eva, Rádlová, Silvie, Pidnebesna, Anna, Tomeček, David, Janovcová, Markéta, Peléšková, Šárka, Sedláčková, Kristýna, Štolhoferová, Iveta, Polák, Jakub, Hlinka, Jaroslav, Frynta, Daniel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10285442/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37363175
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1196785
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author Landová, Eva
Rádlová, Silvie
Pidnebesna, Anna
Tomeček, David
Janovcová, Markéta
Peléšková, Šárka
Sedláčková, Kristýna
Štolhoferová, Iveta
Polák, Jakub
Hlinka, Jaroslav
Frynta, Daniel
author_facet Landová, Eva
Rádlová, Silvie
Pidnebesna, Anna
Tomeček, David
Janovcová, Markéta
Peléšková, Šárka
Sedláčková, Kristýna
Štolhoferová, Iveta
Polák, Jakub
Hlinka, Jaroslav
Frynta, Daniel
author_sort Landová, Eva
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The administration of questionnaires presents an easy way of obtaining important knowledge about phobic patients. However, it is not well known how these subjective measurements correspond to the patient’s objective condition. Our study aimed to compare scores on questionnaires and image evaluation to the objective measurements of the behavioral approach test (BAT) and the neurophysiological effect of spiders extracted from fMRI measurements. The objective was to explore how reliably subjective statements about spiders and physiological and behavioral parameters discriminate between phobics and non-phobics, and what are the best predictors of overall brain activation. METHODS: Based on a clinical interview, 165 subjects were assigned to either a “phobic” or low-fear “control” group. Finally, 30 arachnophobic and 32 healthy control subjects (with low fear of spiders) participated in this study. They completed several questionnaires (SPQ, SNAQ, DS-R) and underwent a behavioral approach test (BAT) with a live tarantula. Then, they were measured in fMRI while watching blocks of pictures including spiders and snakes. Finally, the respondents rated all the visual stimuli according to perceived fear. We proposed the Spider Fear Index (SFI) as a value characterizing the level of spider fear, computed based on the fMRI measurements. We then treated this variable as the “neurophysiological effect of spiders” and examined its contribution to the respondents’ fear ratings of the stimuli seen during the fMRI using the redundancy analysis (RDA). RESULTS: The results for fear ranks revealed that the SFI, SNAQ, DS-R, and SPQ scores had a significant effect, while BAT and SPQ scores loaded in the same direction of the first multivariate axis. The SFI was strongly correlated with both SPQ and BAT scores in the pooled sample of arachnophobic and healthy control subjects. DISCUSSION: Both SPQ and BAT scores have a high informative value about the subject’s fear of spiders and together with subjective emotional evaluation of picture stimuli can be reliable predictors of spider phobia. These parameters provide easy and non-expensive but reliable measurement wherever more expensive devices such as magnetic resonance are not available. However, SFI still reflects individual variability within the phobic group, identifying individuals with higher brain activation, which may relate to more severe phobic reactions or other sources of fMRI signal variability.
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spelling pubmed-102854422023-06-23 Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response Landová, Eva Rádlová, Silvie Pidnebesna, Anna Tomeček, David Janovcová, Markéta Peléšková, Šárka Sedláčková, Kristýna Štolhoferová, Iveta Polák, Jakub Hlinka, Jaroslav Frynta, Daniel Front Psychiatry Psychiatry INTRODUCTION: The administration of questionnaires presents an easy way of obtaining important knowledge about phobic patients. However, it is not well known how these subjective measurements correspond to the patient’s objective condition. Our study aimed to compare scores on questionnaires and image evaluation to the objective measurements of the behavioral approach test (BAT) and the neurophysiological effect of spiders extracted from fMRI measurements. The objective was to explore how reliably subjective statements about spiders and physiological and behavioral parameters discriminate between phobics and non-phobics, and what are the best predictors of overall brain activation. METHODS: Based on a clinical interview, 165 subjects were assigned to either a “phobic” or low-fear “control” group. Finally, 30 arachnophobic and 32 healthy control subjects (with low fear of spiders) participated in this study. They completed several questionnaires (SPQ, SNAQ, DS-R) and underwent a behavioral approach test (BAT) with a live tarantula. Then, they were measured in fMRI while watching blocks of pictures including spiders and snakes. Finally, the respondents rated all the visual stimuli according to perceived fear. We proposed the Spider Fear Index (SFI) as a value characterizing the level of spider fear, computed based on the fMRI measurements. We then treated this variable as the “neurophysiological effect of spiders” and examined its contribution to the respondents’ fear ratings of the stimuli seen during the fMRI using the redundancy analysis (RDA). RESULTS: The results for fear ranks revealed that the SFI, SNAQ, DS-R, and SPQ scores had a significant effect, while BAT and SPQ scores loaded in the same direction of the first multivariate axis. The SFI was strongly correlated with both SPQ and BAT scores in the pooled sample of arachnophobic and healthy control subjects. DISCUSSION: Both SPQ and BAT scores have a high informative value about the subject’s fear of spiders and together with subjective emotional evaluation of picture stimuli can be reliable predictors of spider phobia. These parameters provide easy and non-expensive but reliable measurement wherever more expensive devices such as magnetic resonance are not available. However, SFI still reflects individual variability within the phobic group, identifying individuals with higher brain activation, which may relate to more severe phobic reactions or other sources of fMRI signal variability. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-06-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10285442/ /pubmed/37363175 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1196785 Text en Copyright © 2023 Landová, Rádlová, Pidnebesna, Tomeček, Janovcová, Peléšková, Sedláčková, Štolhoferová, Polák, Hlinka and Frynta. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychiatry
Landová, Eva
Rádlová, Silvie
Pidnebesna, Anna
Tomeček, David
Janovcová, Markéta
Peléšková, Šárka
Sedláčková, Kristýna
Štolhoferová, Iveta
Polák, Jakub
Hlinka, Jaroslav
Frynta, Daniel
Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response
title Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response
title_full Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response
title_fullStr Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response
title_full_unstemmed Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response
title_short Toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response
title_sort toward a reliable detection of arachnophobia: subjective, behavioral, and neurophysiological measures of fear response
topic Psychiatry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10285442/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37363175
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1196785
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