Processing efficiency in anxiety: Evidence from eye-movements during visual search |
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Authors: | Nazanin Derakshan Ernst H.W. Koster |
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Affiliation: | aLaboratory of Affective and Cognitive Neuroscience, Department of Psychological Science, Birkbeck University of London, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HX, UK;bDepartment of Psychology, Ghent University, Belgium |
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Abstract: | It is generally held that anxiety is characterized by an attentional bias for threatening information. In recent years there has been an important debate whether these biases reside at the level of attentional selection (threat detection) or attentional processing after threat detection (attentional disengagement). In a visual search task containing emotional facial expressions, eye-movements were examined before and after threat detection in high and low trait anxious individuals to further elucidate the temporal unfolding of attentional bias. Results indicated that high-anxious individuals neither showed facilitated orienting to threat nor impaired disengagement of visual attention from threat. Interestingly, the presence of threat in the visual search display was associated with increased decision times in high-anxious individuals. These results challenge some of the current views on attentional bias to threat but indicate that emotional information reduces processing efficiency in anxiety. |
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Keywords: | Anxiety Processing efficiency Eye-movement Threat Visual search Attentional bias |
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