Àá½Ã¸¸ ±â´Ù·Á ÁÖ¼¼¿ä. ·ÎµùÁßÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
KMID : 0981220190190010059
Congnitive Behavior Therapy in Korea
2019 Volume.19 No. 1 p.59 ~ p.87
Exposure and video feedback vs. imagery rescripting, which is the better intervention for social anxiety disorder? : A pilot study
Ahn Jung-Kwang

Kwon Jung-Hye
Abstract
This study was conducted as a pilot study to compare the effects of exposure plus video feedback (VF; n=10) and imagery rescripting (IR; n=12) among participants who were diagnosed with a social anxiety disorder (SAD). The subjects consisted of 22 people diagnosed with SAD through a structured interview. The vividness, distress, and frequency of negative self-imagery (NSI) and those of negative past memory (NPM) were addressed before and after therapy. In addition, social anxiety symptoms (social interaction anxiety scale, social phobia scale, brief-fear of negative evaluation scale, social avoidance and distress scale), judgmental bias (subjective probability/cost questionnaire), and core belief were also measured before and after the treatment. The results of this study were as follows: 1) There were no significant interaction effects of vividness, distress, and frequency of NSI reduction between the two groups. However, the main effects of time were significant. 2) There were no significant interaction effects on vividness and distress of NPM reduction between the two groups, but the main effects of time were significant. In the case of frequency of NPM, both the interaction and the main effect of time were not significant. 3) There were no significant interaction effects of social anxiety symptom reduction, but the main effects of time were significant. In the fear of negative evaluation scale, the IR group showed a significant decrease, but the VF group showed no significant changes on the within-group comparisons. 4) There were no significant interaction effects of decreasing judgmental bias, but the main effects of time were significant. In the case of cost bias, the IR group showed a significant change in the within-group comparison, but the VF group was not significant. 5) There was no significant interaction effect of core belief reduction, but the main effect of time was significant. 6) On all social anxiety scales, the VF group showed medium to large effect sizes, and the IR group showed large effect sizes. The implications and limitation of this study were discussed, and suggestions for future research were suggested.
KEYWORD
Social anxiety disorder, negative self-imagery, exposure, video feedback, imagery rescripting
FullTexts / Linksout information
Listed journal information
ÇмúÁøÈïÀç´Ü(KCI)