David Martindale believes his Livingston side are allowing "fear" to affect their Scottish Premiership performances after the stalemate with St Johnstone made it 11 games without victory.
The West Lothian club, four points adrift at the foot of the table, had numerous chances to score, with captain Michael Devlin spurning the best of them with the final kick.
"You progress through times of adversity, we've all got to dig in and work through this difficult period," manager Martindale told BBC Scotland.
"You can't let fear take over your decision-making on the park and that's probably what we're finding slightly. You are one game, one goal, one win away from everything changing."
Luke Robinson's effort was disallowed for St Johnstone, who moved level on points with eighth-placed Aberdeen, with neither of the league's lowest-scoring club able to conjure a moment of clinical quality.
For all their issues in front of goal, this game did not lack for chances - only the accuracy required to take them.
Nicky Clark would have struck early on, if only Stevie May's square ball was hit a little more gently, and Clark went near again when home keeper Shamal George failed to deal with a low free-kick.
Livingston's powerful and energetic forward line caused St Johnstone some strife, while Jason Holt fizzed menacingly behind them.
The wily midfielder unleashed a vicious drive on the volley from 25 yards, bringing a flying stop from Dimitar Mitov.
Livingston pressed again after the break, Devlin and Kurtis Guthrie seeing efforts comfortably stopped, before Scott Pittman lashed wide when played through and Bruce Anderson hit the side-netting from a tight angle.
It looked like the decisive touch would never arrive, but it ought to have done deep into stoppage time.
Mitov palmed a tame cross straight to the feet of Devlin, but the captain skewed a first-time finish wide with his left boot.
The St Johnstone midfielder was calm and assured in the maelstrom.
Toothless attack has been the scourge of each side's campaign, with neither scoring a first-half goal in 17 of their games.
Livingston have scored only twice on their winless 11-game streak and 10 in total this season, their issues summed up by Devlin's last-ditch miss.
Martindale fielded virtually all of his most potent attacking players, but none were able to cleave St Johnstone open.
Visiting boss Craig Levein continues to steadily improve his team's form, taking three wins and two draws from his first nine games at the helm.
They struggled at times to deal with Livingston's aerial threats, but had chances of their own which could, perhaps should, have been turned into goals.
Livingston manager David Martindale: "We had 14 shots, three on target, and we are not converting any of them. The conversion rate needs to get a lot better - that's the story of the game.
"There's no magic formula or words I'm going to say, it is going to be someone coming up with that wee bit of quality to get us a goal."
St Johnstone manager Craig Levein: "Our performance probably didn't merit a win and I think Davie Martindale might say the same.
"It was two fairly nervous teams slugging it out. The result was safe football and generally safe football isn't that entertaining.
"There are things we'd like to add in January. It's difficult, there's also this thing about keeping the wage bill under control. We need to move some players out as well. There might be a fair bit of activity."
Livingston face a huge trip to fellow strugglers Motherwell on Saturday (15:00 GMT), while St Johnstone visit Dundee on Tuesday (15:00 GMT).