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Cross-Cultural Study of Information Processing Biases in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Comparison of Dutch and UK Chronic Fatigue Patients
Authors:Alicia M Hughes  Colette R Hirsch  Stephanie Nikolaus  Trudie Chalder  Hans Knoop  Rona Moss-Morris
Institution:1.Psychology Department, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience,King’s College London,London,UK;2.Expert Centre for Chronic Fatigue,Radboud University Medical Centre,Nijmegen,The Netherlands;3.Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience,King’s College London,London,UK;4.Department of Medical Psychology, Academic Medical Centre (AMC),University of Amsterdam,Amsterdam,The Netherlands
Abstract:

Purpose

This study aims to replicate a UK study, with a Dutch sample to explore whether attention and interpretation biases and general attentional control deficits in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) are similar across populations and cultures.

Method

Thirty eight Dutch CFS participants were compared to 52 CFS and 51 healthy participants recruited from the UK. Participants completed self-report measures of symptoms, functioning, and mood, as well as three experimental tasks (i) visual-probe task measuring attentional bias to illness (somatic symptoms and disability) versus neutral words, (ii) interpretive bias task measuring positive versus somatic interpretations of ambiguous information, and (iii) the Attention Network Test measuring general attentional control.

Results

Compared to controls, Dutch and UK participants with CFS showed a significant attentional bias for illness-related words and were significantly more likely to interpret ambiguous information in a somatic way. These effects were not moderated by attentional control. There were no significant differences between the Dutch and UK CFS groups on attentional bias, interpretation bias, or attentional control scores.

Conclusion

This study replicated the main findings of the UK study, with a Dutch CFS population, indicating that across these two cultures, people with CFS demonstrate biases in how somatic information is attended to and interpreted. These illness-specific biases appear to be unrelated to general attentional control deficits.
Keywords:
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