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Affective asynchrony and the measurement of the affective attitude component
Authors:Ellen Peters  Paul Slovic
Affiliation:1. Decision Research , Eugene, OR, USA empeters@uoregon.edu.;3. Decision Research , Eugene, OR, USA
Abstract:Theoretical models of social phobia propose that biased attention contributes to the maintenance of symptoms; however these theoretical models make opposing predictions. Specifically, whereas Rapee and Heimberg (1997) suggested the biases are characterised by hypervigilance to threat cues and difficulty disengaging attention from threat, Clark and Wells (1995) suggested that threat cues are largely avoided. Previous research has been limited by the almost exclusive reliance on behavioural response times to experimental tasks to provide an index of attentional biases. The current study evaluated the relationship between the time-course of attention and symptoms of social anxiety and depression. Forty-two young adults completed a dot-probe task with emotional faces while eye-movement data were collected. The results revealed that increased social anxiety was associated with attention to emotional (rather than neutral) faces over time as well as difficulty disengaging attention from angry expressions; some evidence was found for a relationship between heightened depressive symptoms and increased attention to fear faces.
Keywords:Social anxiety  Depression  Eye-tracking  Vigilance  Disengagement  Attention  Dot-probe
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