It is not the shimmy, it is the shift: Differential effects of valence shift type and stimulation mode during a simulated EMDR session in PTSD patients and healthy controls
Mechanism-of-action studies on EMDR have so far focused mainly on the presumed active component of bilateral stimulation (BLS). In this pilot study, a further potential working mechanism was examined for the first time, involving stimulation-induced changes in emotional valence.
Article Abstract
“Introduction. Mechanism-of-action studies on Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing have so far focused mainly on the presumed active component of bilateral stimulation (BLS). In this pilot study, a further potential working mechanism was examined for the first time, involving stimulation-induced changes in emotional valence.
Methods. Twenty-five patients with posttraumatic stress disorder and 25 healthy controls between 19 and 64 years of age underwent a simulated intervention based on components of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). Each participant was presented with 18 individual script pairs, simulating different valence shifts (valence switch into neutral, valence switch into positive, no valence shift), whereas BLS vs. no BLS were applied. During the intervention, subjective and physiological emotional responses were measured.
Results. When valence shifted to positive or neutral, a significant change in treatment-relevant subjective and physiological effect measures was found compared to scripts without a valence shift. For stimulation type, no subjective, but significant physiological effects were observed: The controls showed a physiological de-arousal under BLS, indicated by a decreased skin conductance level, and the patients showed an accelerated heart rate and an increased M. zygomaticus activity. Significant interaction effects were observed: Under BLS, the arousal-reducing and valence-changing effects of negative to neutral switches increased. Interestingly, these BLS effects became conscious to the participants only when valence switches were applied.
Discussion. The findings provide new insights into the potential emotion-modulating physiological effects of BLS and its interplay with changes in emotional valence.
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Article Preprint Access
Open Access Preprint
Pape, V., Barczyk, F., von Klitzing, C., Fitting, C., Stingl, M., Schaeflein, E., & Wolkenhauer, O. (2026). It is not the shimmy, it is the shift: Differential effects of valence shift type and stimulation mode during a simulated EMDR session in PTSD patients and healthy controls. Health Sciences. Preprint: https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.01.08.26343688
Date
January 16, 2026
Creator(s)
Valeska Reichel Pape, Francine Barczyk, Carolin von Klitzing
Contributor(s)
Carla Fitting, Markus Stingl, Eva Schaeflein, Olaf Wolkenhauer
Topics
PTSD
Practice & Methods
BLS, Mechanisms of Action, Neurobiology
Rights
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. All rights reserved. No reuse allowed without permission.
APA Citation
Pape, V., Barczyk, F., von Klitzing, C., Fitting, C., Stingl, M., Schaeflein, E., & Wolkenhauer, O. (2026). It is not the shimmy, it is the shift: Differential effects of valence shift type and stimulation mode during a simulated EMDR session in PTSD patients and healthy controls. Health Sciences. Preprint: https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.01.08.26343688
Audience
EMDR Therapists
Language
English
Content Type
Article
Access Type
External Resource, Open Access