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Dropping safety aids and maximizing retrieval cues
Two keys to optimizing inhibitory learning during exposure therapy
Blakey, S., & Abramowitz, J. (2019). Dropping safety aids and maximizing retrieval cues: Two keys to optimizing inhibitory learning during exposure therapy. Cognitive and Behavioral Practice, 26(1), 166-175. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpra.2018.03.001
The inhibitory learning model of exposure therapy posits that clinical anxiety is most effectively treated when clinicians employ strategies that maximize the (a) violation of negative expectancies and (b) generalization of nonthreat associations. Translation of basic learning research to exposure therapy via this explanatory model underscores two keys to optimizing inhibitory learning during exposure: dropping safety aids and maximizing retrieval cues. Although topographically similar, safety aids and retrieval cues are functionally distinct as well as therapeutically incompatible. In the present article, we delineate safety aids and retrieval cues in the context of exposure therapy from an inhibitory learning perspective, providing illustrative case examples of how clinicians may address the two when treating patients with clinical anxiety.