Downey Haylee, Xu Shuangshuang, Ahmadi Sareh, Shah Aditya, Brown Jeremiah M, Bickel Warren K, Epstein Leonard H, Tegge Allison N, Fox Edward A, Stein Jeffrey S
Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC, Roanoke, VA, USA.
Graduate Program in Translational Biology, Medicine, and Health, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Health Psychol Behav Med. 2025 Jun 2;13(1):2510417. doi: 10.1080/21642850.2025.2510417. eCollection 2025.
Episodic future thinking (EFT), an intervention in which participants vividly imagine their future, has been explored as a cognitive intervention to reduce delay discounting and decrease engagement in harmful health behaviors. In these studies, participants generate text descriptions of personally meaningful future events. The content of these text descriptions, or cues, is heterogeneous and can vary along several dimensions (e.g. references to health, celebrations, family; vividness; emotional valence). However, little work has quantified this heterogeneity or potential importance for EFT's efficacy. To better understand the potential impact of EFT content in the context of health behavior change (e.g. diet) among people with or at risk for obesity and related conditions, we used data from 19 prior EFT studies, including 1705 participants (mean body mass index = 33.1) who generated 9714 cues. We used natural language processing to classify EFT content and examined whether EFT content moderated effects on delay discounting. Cues most commonly involved recreation, food, and spending time with family, and least commonly involved references to health and self-improvement. Cues were generally classified as highly vivid, episodic, and positively valent (consistent with the intervention's design). In multivariate regression with model selection, EFT content did not significantly moderate the effect of the episodic thinking intervention. Thus, we find no evidence that any of the content characteristics we examined were important moderators of the efficacy of EFT in reducing delay discounting. This suggests that EFT's efficacy is robust against variability in these characteristics. However, note that in all studies, EFT methods were designed to generate high levels of vividness, episodicity, and emotional valence, potentially resulting in a ceiling effect in these content areas. Moreover, EFT content was not experimentally manipulated, limiting causal inference. Future studies should experimentally examine these and other content characteristics and evaluate their possible role in EFT's efficacy.
情景式未来思维(EFT)是一种让参与者生动想象自身未来的干预方式,已被作为一种认知干预手段进行研究,旨在减少延迟折扣并降低有害健康行为的参与度。在这些研究中,参与者生成对个人有意义的未来事件的文字描述。这些文字描述的内容或线索具有异质性,并且可以在几个维度上有所不同(例如提及健康、庆祝活动、家庭;生动程度;情感效价)。然而,几乎没有研究对这种异质性或其对EFT疗效的潜在重要性进行量化。为了更好地理解在肥胖及相关疾病患者或有肥胖风险的人群中,EFT内容在健康行为改变(如饮食)背景下的潜在影响,我们使用了来自19项先前EFT研究的数据,其中包括1705名参与者(平均体重指数 = 33.1),他们生成了9714条线索。我们使用自然语言处理对EFT内容进行分类,并检验EFT内容是否调节了对延迟折扣的影响。线索最常涉及娱乐、食物以及与家人共度时光,最不常涉及对健康和自我提升的提及。线索通常被归类为高度生动、具有情景性且情感效价为正(与干预设计一致)。在进行模型选择的多元回归分析中,EFT内容并未显著调节情景式思维干预的效果。因此,我们没有发现证据表明我们所考察的任何内容特征是EFT在减少延迟折扣方面疗效的重要调节因素。这表明EFT的疗效对于这些特征的变异性具有较强的抗性。然而,请注意,在所有研究中,EFT方法旨在产生高水平的生动性、情景性和情感效价,这可能在这些内容领域导致天花板效应。此外,EFT内容未经过实验操纵,限制了因果推断。未来的研究应通过实验考察这些及其他内容特征,并评估它们在EFT疗效中可能发挥的作用。