From the Editor
Though years had passed since his peacekeeping service in Bosnia, my patient lucidly described the flashbacks and nightmares that still haunted him. It raises an important question: is it possible to prevent PTSD in the first place?
In a new, important American Journal of Psychiatry paper, Chelsea Dyan Gober Dykan (of Tel Aviv University) and her co-authors attempt to answer that question by drawing on past work showing the effectiveness of response-time-based attention bias modification (RT-based ABM), a cognitive training technique. They describe a three-arm randomized controlled trial involving more than 500 male combat-bound soldiers who, before combat exposure, received one of two cognitive training techniques (RT-based ABM and a variant focused on gaze) or a sham intervention. Participants then reported on PTSD symptoms after it. “Consistent with a previous randomized controlled trial, RT-based ABM reduced risk for PTSD relative to sham ABM when implemented prior to combat exposure.” We consider the paper and its implications.

How common are AI hallucinations? In the second selection, Jake Linardon (of Deakin University) and his co-authors look at hallucinations through the prism of psychiatry, asking ChatGPT to draft writing on several disorders. In their JMIR Mental Health study, hallucinations were frequent. “Citation fabrication and bibliographic errors remain common in GPT-4o outputs, with nearly two-thirds of citations being fabricated or inaccurate.”
Finally, in the third selection from Academic Psychiatry, Dr. Sheba Gollapudi (of the University of Texas) mulls the power of the stethoscope and its psychiatric equivalent. She describes how she developed her listening skills and her use of silence. “Because even though I will not necessarily use a stethoscope in my everyday practice, I know now that the stethoscope is within me.”
DG
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