ABC Training: A New Theory-Based Form of Cognitive-Bias Modification to Foster Automatization of Alternative Choices in the Treatment of Addiction and Related Disorders

Author:

Wiers Reinout W.123ORCID,Van Dessel Pieter4ORCID,Köpetz Catalina5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Developmental Psychology, Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam

2. Addiction Development and Psychopathology (ADAPT) Lab, University of Amsterdam

3. Centre for Urban Mental Health, University of Amsterdam

4. Department of Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University

5. Department of Psychology, Wayne State University

Abstract

Recent years have seen a surge in the popularity of interventions that target common distortions in thinking (cognitive-bias modification, or CBM). Although there is evidence of their effectiveness as add-ons to regular treatment in alcohol addiction, the effects are typically small, and recent findings from lab studies have called into question the dominant theoretical underpinnings of CBM. We provide a novel theoretical approach in terms of automatic inferences that integrates previous findings and suggests ways to improve CBM into ABC training. In ABC training, patients are trained in the context of personally relevant antecedents (A) to make behavioral choices (B) that accord with patients’ health goals in light of their consequences (C). We discuss preliminary evidence suggesting that ABC training might be a useful tool in the treatment of addictions and related disorders.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

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