Hypervigilance during anxiety and selective attention during fear: Using steady-state visual evoked potentials (ssVEPs) to disentangle attention mechanisms during predictable and unpredictable threat

被引:31
|
作者
Kastner-Dorn, Anna K. [1 ]
Andreatta, Marta [1 ]
Pauli, Paul [1 ]
Wieser, Matthias J. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wurzburg, Dept Psychol Biol Psychol Clin Psychol & Psychoth, Wurzburg, Germany
[2] Erasmus Univ, Dept Psychol Educ & Child Studies, Rotterdam, Netherlands
关键词
Fear; Anxiety; Attention; Defensive responding; EEG; ssVEP; Heart rate; CONDITIONING EVIDENCE; SUSTAINED ATTENTION; DEFENSIVE BEHAVIOR; EMOTIONAL AROUSAL; REFLEX PHYSIOLOGY; PANIC DISORDER; TIME-COURSE; CONTEXT; FACES; AVOIDANCE;
D O I
10.1016/j.cortex.2018.05.008
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Anxiety is induced by unpredictable threat, and presumably characterized by enhanced vigilance. In contrast, fear is elicited by imminent threat, and leads to phasic responses with selective attention. In order to investigate attention mechanisms and defensive responding during fear and anxiety, we employed an adaptation of the NPU-threat test and measured cortical (steady-state visual evoked potentials, ssVEPs), physiological (heart rate, HR), and subjective responses (ratings) to predictable (fear-related) and unpredictable (anxiety-related) threat in 42 healthy participants. An aversive unconditioned stimulus (US, loud noise) was 100% predicted by a cue (predictable P-cue) in one context (predictable P-context), but appeared unpredictably within a different context (unpredictable U-context, U-cue), while it was never delivered in a neutral safe context (N-cue, N- context). In response to predictable threat (P-cue), increased ssVEP amplitudes and accelerated HR were found. Both predictable and unpredictable contexts yielded increased ssVEP amplitudes compared to the safe context. Interestingly, in the unpredictable context participants showed longer-lasting visuocortical activation than in the predictable context, supporting the notion of heightened vigilance during anxiety. In parallel, HR decelerated to both threat contexts indicating fear bradycardia to these threatening contexts as compared to the safe context. These results support the idea of hypervigilance in anxiety-like situations reflected in a long-lasting facilitated processing of sensory information, in contrast to increased selective attention to specific imminent threat during fear. Thus, this study further supports the defense-cascade model with vigilance and orienting in the post-encounter phase of threat (anxiety), while selective attention and defensive mobilization in the circa-strike phase of threat (fear). (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:120 / 131
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Event-related potentials during visual selective attention in children of alcoholics
    van der Stelt, O
    Gunning, WB
    Snel, J
    Kok, A
    ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH, 1998, 22 (09) : 1877 - 1889
  • [42] Human cerebral and cerebellar rCBF during steady-state visual evoked response
    Pastor, MA
    Masdeu, JC
    Arbizu, J
    Artieda, J
    NEUROLOGY, 2002, 58 (07) : A450 - A450
  • [43] Single-epoch analysis of interleaved evoked potentials and fMRI responses during steady-state visual stimulation
    Bianciardi, M.
    Bianchi, L.
    Garreffa, G.
    Abbafati, M.
    Di Russo, F.
    Marciani, M. G.
    Macaluso, E.
    CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2009, 120 (04) : 738 - 747
  • [44] Visuocortical Changes During Delay and Trace Aversive Conditioning: Evidence From Steady-State Visual Evoked Potentials
    Miskovic, Vladimir
    Keil, Andreas
    EMOTION, 2013, 13 (03) : 554 - 561
  • [45] Human cerebral activation during steady-state visual-evoked responses
    Pastor, MA
    Artieda, J
    Arbizu, J
    Valencia, M
    Masdeu, JC
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2003, 23 (37): : 11621 - 11627
  • [46] Hemifield Crossings during Multiple Object Tracking Affect Task Performance and Steady-State Visual Evoked Potentials
    Minami, Tetsuto
    Shinkai, Takahiro
    Nakauchi, Shigeki
    NEUROSCIENCE, 2019, 409 : 162 - 168
  • [47] A complementary note for the analytical method to estimate individual attention fluctuation using steady-state evoked potentials
    Norouzpour, Amir
    Roberts, Tawna L.
    Klein, Stanley A.
    BIOMEDICAL SIGNAL PROCESSING AND CONTROL, 2023, 81
  • [48] Time course of affective bias in visual attention: Convergent evidence from steady-state visual evoked potentials and behavioral data
    Attar, Catherine Hindi
    Andersen, Soren K.
    Mueller, Matthias M.
    NEUROIMAGE, 2010, 53 (04) : 1326 - 1333
  • [49] Social Norm Learning Alters Feature-Based Visual Attention: Evidence From Steady-State Visual Evoked Potentials
    Germar, Markus
    Albrecht, Thorsten
    Mojzisch, Andreas
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2023, 49 (11) : 1460 - 1466
  • [50] INVESTIGATING SUSTAINED ATTENTION IN CONTEXTUAL ANXIETY USING STEADY-STATE VEPS EVOKED BY FLICKERING VIDEO STIMULI
    Stegmann, Yannik
    Reicherts, Philipp
    Pauli, Paul
    Wieser, Matthias
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2018, 55 : S46 - S46