Trait anxiety and the alignment of attentional bias with controllability of danger

被引:0
|
作者
Lies Notebaert
Jessie Veronica Georgiades
Matthew Herbert
Ben Grafton
Sam Parsons
Elaine Fox
Colin MacLeod
机构
[1] University of Western Australia,Centre for the Advancement of Research on Emotion, School of Psychological Science
[2] University of Oxford,Oxford Centre for Emotion and Affective Neuroscience, Department of Experimental Psychology
来源
Psychological Research | 2020年 / 84卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Attentional bias to threat cues is most adaptive when the dangers they signal can readily be controlled by timely action. This study examined whether heightened trait anxiety is associated with impaired alignment between attentional bias to threat and variation in the controllability of danger, and whether this is moderated by executive functioning. Participants completed a task in which threat cues signalled money loss and an aversive noise burst (the danger). In ‘high control’ blocks, attending to the threat cue offered a high chance of avoiding this danger. In ‘low control’ blocks, attending to the threat cue offered little control over the danger. The task yielded measures of attentional monitoring for threat, and attentional orienting to threat. Results indicated all participants showed greater attentional orienting to threat cues in high control relative to low control blocks (indicative of proper alignment), however, high trait-anxious participants showed no difference in attentional monitoring for threat between block types, whereas low trait-anxious participants did. This effect was moderated by N-Back scores. These results suggest heightened trait anxiety may be associated with impaired alignment of attentional monitoring for threat cues, and that such alignment deficit may be attenuated by high executive functioning.
引用
收藏
页码:743 / 756
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Attentional bias in math anxiety
    Rubinsten, Orly
    Eidlin, Hill
    Wohl, Hades
    Akibli, Orly
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2015, 6
  • [22] ATTENTIONAL BIAS IN ANXIETY - SELECTIVE OR NOT
    FOX, E
    BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 1993, 31 (05) : 487 - 493
  • [23] Attentional bias in social anxiety
    Pishyar, R
    Harris, L
    Menzies, R
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2004, 39 (5-6) : 188 - 188
  • [24] Enhanced Attentional Capture in Trait Anxiety
    Moser, Jason S.
    Becker, Mark W.
    Moran, Tim P.
    EMOTION, 2012, 12 (02) : 213 - 216
  • [25] Trait anxiety and the dynamics of attentional control
    Osinsky, Roman
    Gebhardt, Helge
    Alexander, Nina
    Hennig, Juergen
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 89 (01) : 252 - 259
  • [26] Expectancy bias in trait anxiety
    Chan, CKY
    Lovibond, PF
    JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1996, 105 (04) : 637 - 647
  • [27] Trait anxiety, defensiveness and selective processing of threat: an investigation using two measures of attentional bias
    Mogg, K
    Bradley, BP
    Dixon, C
    Fisher, S
    Twelftree, H
    McWilliams, A
    PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2000, 28 (06) : 1063 - 1077
  • [28] Attentional bias in trait anxiety: Measures of eye movements, facial muscle activity, and skin conductance
    Rohner, JC
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 35 (3-4) : 107 - 107
  • [29] Reducing anxiety and attentional bias with reward association learning and attentional bias modification
    Xiao, Wen
    Zheng, Xiaoqi
    Luo, Yuejia
    Peng, Jiaxin
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 13
  • [30] Estradiol moderates the relationship between state-trait anxiety and attentional bias to threat in women
    Graham, Bronwyn M.
    Shin, Geena
    PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, 2018, 93 : 82 - 89