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Memory bias for threatening information related to anxiety: an updated meta-analytic review
Authors:Sara Herrera  Ignacio Montorio  Isabel Cabrera  Juan Botella
Affiliation:1. Department of Biological and Health Psychology, Autónoma University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain;2. Centro Salud Almendrales, University Hospital 12 de Octubre, Madrid, Spain
Abstract:The evidence for an anxiety-related memory bias is contradictory. We compiled 171 articles published until October 2016 including a group with clinical or subclinical anxiety and a control group in tasks involving implicit or explicit memory using threatening stimuli. There was an anxiety-related memory bias in free recall tasks, but it was not observed in another memory task. The between-groups differences showed that the anxious group recalled more threatening stimuli than the control group (d?=?0.321). When we compared the group differences (anxious vs. control participants) in the within-groups effect (threatening vs. neutral stimuli), a moderate effect size emerged (dbw?=?0.714). This anxiety-related memory bias was observed with shallow processing, that is consistent with attentional biases related to anxiety. There was also evidence that high-anxious persons recall fewer positive stimuli. Future research is needed to investigate whether this result is a memory or encoding bias and explore other moderator variables.
Keywords:Cognitive biases  memory bias  anxiety disorders  trait anxiety  meta-analysis
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