The Effect of Attachment Security Priming and Oxytocin on Physiological Responses to Trauma Films and Subsequent Intrusions
Karl, A; Carnelley, KB; Arikan, G; et al.Baldwin, DS; Heinrichs, M; Stopa, L
Date: 13 March 2021
Journal
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
To further understand protective mechanisms to prevent post-traumatic stress disorder or
assist recovery from psychological trauma, this study investigated whether pharmacological and
psychological activation of a secure attachment representation elicits higher felt-security and a
related response pattern of reduced physiological ...
To further understand protective mechanisms to prevent post-traumatic stress disorder or
assist recovery from psychological trauma, this study investigated whether pharmacological and
psychological activation of a secure attachment representation elicits higher felt-security and a
related response pattern of reduced physiological arousal and increased parasympathetic activation;
and whether it protects individuals from developing intrusions and experiencing distress in the week
following exposure to a trauma film. Using a double-blind, experimental mixed factorial design,
101 volunteers received either oxytocin or placebo and either secure attachment or neutral priming
before watching a trauma film. We measured felt security as an indicator of the strength of
activation of a secure attachment representation, skin conductance and heart rate as indicators of
physiological arousal, and high frequency heart rate variability as an indicator of parasympathetic
activation during the priming and the film. Participants then completed a seven-day intrusion diary.
Secure attachment priming, but not oxytocin administration or the combination of both, was
associated with reduced physiological arousal and increased parasympathetic activity during
priming. Although secure attachment priming was not related to the absolute number of intrusions
or to less perceived distress or physiological arousal during the trauma film, it was associated with
lower intrusion-related distress in the 7-days post-testing. Our findings extend previous research
that suggests the importance of interventions that address intrusion-related distress for recovery
from trauma, and suggest a promising role for secure attachment priming in trauma-focused
psychological therapies. We contribute to the growing literature that finds that higher subjective
distress during a trauma is associated with higher intrusion-related distress. We discuss theoretical
implications and possible mechanisms through which secure attachment priming may exert
potential beneficial effects.
Psychology - old structure
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2021. This version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/