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Threat Learning Difficulties in Adolescents with Anxiety Problems: Investigating their Nature and Neural Bases

Lead Research Organisation: University of Oxford
Department Name: Experimental Psychology

Abstract

Abstracts are not currently available in GtR for all funded research. This is normally because the abstract was not required at the time of proposal submission, but may be because it included sensitive information such as personal details.

Publications

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Cohen Kadosh K (2015) High trait anxiety during adolescence interferes with discriminatory context learning. in Neurobiology of learning and memory

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Haller SPW (2018) Group decision-making is optimal in adolescence. in Scientific reports

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) Face processing in childhood and adolescence

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) Neurocognitive development during childhood and adolescence in Annual Retreat Mannheim Centre for Mental Health,

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) Face processing in childhood and adolescence

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) (2014) Developmental changes in the neuro-cognitive bases of social cognition during adolescence in Keynote lecture at the 3rd International Congress on Borderline Personality Disorder and Allied Disorders

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) Combining real-time fMRI neurofeedback and cognitive training in adolescence in German Society for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy November 2013 Berlin, Germany

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) (2014) Using real-time fMRI to modify cortical emotion regulation during adolescence in Workshop: Minding the gaps: The challenges of interdisciplinary developmental science

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) Trait anxiety levels modulate threat-learning during adolescence in Fifth European Meeting on Human Fear Conditioning

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Kathrin Cohen Kadosh (Speaker) Attentional biases for fearful faces in mid-childhood in Mental Health throughout Life

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Lau, J.Y.F. (2014) Conference paper

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Pittner, K; Cohen Kadosh, K; Lau JYF Handbook of cognitive neuroscience of learning

 
Description We have conducted 6 studies investigating the role and plasticity of biased threat processing in anxiety problems during development. Our research questions and findings can be grouped under three themes:
1. How difficulties in attention and learning during emotional contexts differentiates low-anxious from high-anxious individuals. Previous studies of anxious adults show that anxiety is characterised by an initial vigilance for threatening cues (where they turn their attention towards threatening cues), followed by avoidance (turning their attention away). There is some evidence that these attentional patterns may facilitate, among anxious adults, enhanced learning of what predicts these threatening outcomes. In three of our studies, we extend these findings to anxious adolescents. First, we show that compared to their non-anxious peers, anxious adolescents are poorer at threat-learning, struggling to discriminate whether it is the relevant background or specific cue that predicts a threatening outcome (study 2, manuscript under review). We show that difficulties in threat-learning may characterise girls more than boys, tentatively explaining why females show greater risk for anxiety problems (study 3, manuscript in preparation). In study 1 (published), we show that anxious adolescents are more avoidant of threatening cues. Putting these data together may suggest that attentional patterns of avoidance disrupt relevant learning of threat cues and threat outcomes.
2. How fear responses to threat and safety signals can be dampened down in adolescents by teaching individuals how to re-appraise stimuli that are emotionally-ambiguous: Our previous work has shown that one of the associated features of poor threat-learning is that anxious adolescents generalise their fear of the threatening stimulus to a safe stimulus. To make matters worse, our previous work has also shown that anxious adolescents find it difficult to use more sophisticated appraisal strategies to regulate their emotions. In Study 4, we investigated whether a simple cognitive training script could teach adolescents how to re-interpret a stimulus or situation that seemed threatening but in actuality was safe, in a benign (non-threatening) way. We compared adolescents who had been assigned to the cognitive intervention to a control condition where adolescents were simply exposed to the threatening/safe stimuli over and over again in the absence of a threatening outcome. Our simple intervention significantly improved self-reported anxiety to the threatening and safe cues - compared to the control condition.
3. How difficulties in the appraisal of stimuli to regulate emotions may be transmitted from mothers to their children: Our fifth study (currently being analysed) is investigating whether difficulties in re-appraising threatening/safe stimuli characterises pregnant women who are anxious - and whether this is a stable trait that affects the early psychosocial environment of their newborn infants. While the present ESRC grant has only funded three waves of data collection from the mothers (second trimester, third trimester, 1 month following birth), we intend to seek further funding for the follow-up of these babies - to investigate whether mother's appraisal style predicts threat-learning difficulties in infants.
4. How attention capture by painful stimuli may characterise adolescents with high levels of pain catastrophising and low levels of attention control. This paper has now been published in Pain.
Exploitation Route Our findings have increased the knowledge base on why some adolescents are more anxious than others, focusing particularly on the way that they attend to, learn from, and appraise threatening information. This knowledge will shape the development of novel interventions for targeting adolescent anxiety, and drive research into investigating the early origins of these threat-processing difficulties. More specifically, we have developed and piloted a cognitive script for enhancing the use of reappraisal strategies to inhibit fear towards threatening and safety cues. This cognitive script needs to be investigated further in clinically anxious adolescents.
Sectors Education

Healthcare

 
Description Our findings have informed a basic science understanding of adolescent anxiety. Specifically, our findings showing that adolescents with anxiety show certain difficulties with learning and attending to threatening information can help to inform the development of new cognitive interventions. We have piloted one such possible intervention as part of the ESRC grant. However as this is just pilot data, it has not yet been applied more generally - which would be the next step.
First Year Of Impact 2015
Sector Healthcare
Impact Types Societal

 
Description Action Medical Training Fellowship
Amount £141,000 (GBP)
Funding ID GN2122 
Organisation Action Medical Research 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 09/2013 
End 10/2016
 
Description European Commisson: The 7th Framework Programme
Amount € 265,059 (EUR)
Organisation European Commission 
Sector Public
Country Belgium
Start 11/2013 
End 11/2017
 
Title Attention capture in children and adolescents 
Description This dataset investigates whether attention capture by emotional stimuli varies as a function of developmental age and trait anxiety levels 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact We have published these data in a scientific journal 
 
Description BRAINTRAIN 
Organisation Cardiff University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution As part of our ESRC grant, we published a joint article on neurocognitive plasticity in adolescents and how adolescents with anxiety may be amenable to external interventions. This then led to a joint funding initiative which led to a successful grant to the European Commission.
Collaborator Contribution We led the writing of the article.
Impact Plasticity during childhood and adolescence: innovative approaches to investigating neurocognitive development Cohen Kadosh, K., Linden, D. E. J. & Lau, J. Y. F. Jul 2013 In : Developmental Science. 16, 4, p. 574-583 N/A
Start Year 2012
 
Description Sharing research protocol with Haifa University researcher 
Organisation University of Haifa
Country Israel 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have shared our research protocol with collaborator at Haifa University to run a similar study in her clinic in Israel, targeting both maltreated Arab and Jewish young people. We have successfully applied for the Daniel Turnberg Fellowship Scheme 2017 for her to visit the UK to work together on the data.
Collaborator Contribution We have helped to shape the research protocol used by our collaborator; we have also shared our tasks and programs.
Impact Successful application to the Daniel Turnberg Fellowship Scheme 2017
Start Year 2017
 
Description Conference on Psychology for sixth form students at a school (Oxford) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact Talks sparked an interest in neuroscience and psychology among young people; we discussed issues relating to mental well-being in young people and also pursuing science as a degree course in tertiary education

After my talk, the school asked if their pupils could visit our lab, and also reported more interest in psychology/neuroscience as a subject for further study at University
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012