Introduction & Theoretical Background
Exposure therapy is the most effective treatment for anxiety disorders. It can take a number of forms:
- Graduated vs. intense (flooding)
- Brief vs. prolonged
- With or without cognitive or somatic coping strategies
- Imaginal vs. interoceptive vs. in vivo
There are a number of models which attempt to explain why exposure to a fear-inducing stimulus is an effective method for overcoming fear. These include:
- Habituation models which focus on the reduction of fear through exposure (e.g. Foa & Kozak, 1986)
- Cognitive models whereby behavioral testing is used to explicity disconfirm mistaken threat-laden assumptions (e.g. Salkovskis et al, 2006)
- Inhibitory learning models which propose that the original CS-US association learned during fear conditioning is not erased during extinction but is instead inhibited by new learning about the CS-US (specifically, that the CS no longer predicts the US)
Craske and colleagues (2014) propose that inhibitory learning is the most helpful model for understanding exposure therapy. Specifically, they argue that anxious individuals show deficits