
@article{ref1,
title="An open pilot study of training hostile interpretation bias to treat disruptive mood dysregulation disorder",
journal="Journal of child and adolescent psychopharmacology",
year="2016",
author="Stoddard, Joel and Sharif-Askary, Banafsheh and Harkins, Elizabeth A. and Frank, Heather R. and Brotman, Melissa A. and Penton-Voak, Ian S. and Maoz, Keren and Bar-Haim, Yair and Munafó, Marcus and Pine, Daniel S. and Leibenluft, Ellen",
volume="26",
number="1",
pages="49-57",
abstract="OBJECTIVE: Irritability in disruptive mood dysregulation disorder (DMDD) may be associated with a biased tendency to judge ambiguous facial expressions as angry. We conducted three experiments to explore this bias as a treatment target. We tested: 1) whether youth with DMDD express this bias; 2) whether judgment of ambiguous faces can be altered in healthy youth by training; and 3) whether such training in youth with DMDD is associated with reduced irritability and associated changes in brain function. <br><br>METHODS: Participants in all experiments made happy versus angry judgments of faces that varied along a happy to angry continuum. These judgments were used to quantify a &quot;balance point,&quot; the facial expression at which a participant's judgment switches from predominantly happy to predominantly angry. We first compared balance points in youth with DMDD (n = 63) versus healthy youth (n = 26). We then conducted a double-blind, randomized controlled trial of active versus sham balance-point training in 19 healthy youth. Finally, we piloted open, active balance-point training in 14 youth with DMDD, with 10 completing an implicit functional MRI (fMRI) face-emotion processing task. <br><br>RESULTS: Relative to healthy youth, DMDD youth manifested a shifted balance point, expressed as a tendency to classify ambiguous faces as angry rather than happy. In both healthy and DMDD youth, active training is associated with a shift in balance point toward more happy judgments. In DMDD, evidence suggests that active training may be associated with decreased irritability and changes in activation in the lateral orbitofrontal cortex. <br><br>CONCLUSIONS: These results set the stage for further research on computer-based treatment targeting interpretation bias of angry faces in DMDD. Such treatment may decrease irritability and alter neural responses to subtle expressions of happiness and anger.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1044-5463",
doi="10.1089/cap.2015.0100",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/cap.2015.0100"
}