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Exploring the function of selective attention and hypervigilance for threat in anxiety

Exploring the function of selective attention and hypervigilance for threat in anxiety
Exploring the function of selective attention and hypervigilance for threat in anxiety
Theoretical frameworks of anxiety propose that attentional biases to threat-related stimuli cause or maintain anxious states. The current paper draws on theoretical frameworks and key empirical studies to outline the distinctive attentional processes highlighted as being important in understanding anxiety. We develop a conceptual framework to make a distinction between two attentional biases: selective attention to threat and hypervigilance for threat. We suggest that these biases each have a different purpose and can account for the typical patterns of facilitated and impaired attention evident in anxious individuals. The framework is novel in its specification of the eye movement behavior associated with these attentional biases. We highlight that selective attention involves narrowing overt attention onto threat to ensure that these stimuli receive processing priority, leading to rapid engagement with task-relevant threat and delayed disengagement from task-irrelevant threat. We show that hypervigilance operates in the presence and absence of threat and involves monitoring for potential dangers via attentional broadening or excessive scanning of the environment with numerous eye movements, leading to improved threat detection and increased distraction from task-irrelevant threat. We conclude that future research could usefully employ eye movement measures to more clearly understand the diverse roles of attention in anxiety.
anxiety, eye movements, threat, selective attention, hypervigilance
0272-7358
1-13
Richards, Helen J.
e4d20ed7-1efd-4310-8f9c-440e5eed78f5
Benson, Valerie
4827cede-6668-4e3d-bded-ade4cd5e5db5
Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Hadwin, Julie A.
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee
Richards, Helen J.
e4d20ed7-1efd-4310-8f9c-440e5eed78f5
Benson, Valerie
4827cede-6668-4e3d-bded-ade4cd5e5db5
Donnelly, Nick
05c83b6b-ee8d-4c9d-85dc-c5dcd6b5427b
Hadwin, Julie A.
a364caf0-405a-42f3-a04c-4864817393ee

Richards, Helen J., Benson, Valerie, Donnelly, Nick and Hadwin, Julie A. (2014) Exploring the function of selective attention and hypervigilance for threat in anxiety. Clinical Psychology Review, 34 (1), 1-13. (doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2013.10.006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Theoretical frameworks of anxiety propose that attentional biases to threat-related stimuli cause or maintain anxious states. The current paper draws on theoretical frameworks and key empirical studies to outline the distinctive attentional processes highlighted as being important in understanding anxiety. We develop a conceptual framework to make a distinction between two attentional biases: selective attention to threat and hypervigilance for threat. We suggest that these biases each have a different purpose and can account for the typical patterns of facilitated and impaired attention evident in anxious individuals. The framework is novel in its specification of the eye movement behavior associated with these attentional biases. We highlight that selective attention involves narrowing overt attention onto threat to ensure that these stimuli receive processing priority, leading to rapid engagement with task-relevant threat and delayed disengagement from task-irrelevant threat. We show that hypervigilance operates in the presence and absence of threat and involves monitoring for potential dangers via attentional broadening or excessive scanning of the environment with numerous eye movements, leading to improved threat detection and increased distraction from task-irrelevant threat. We conclude that future research could usefully employ eye movement measures to more clearly understand the diverse roles of attention in anxiety.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 November 2013
Published date: February 2014
Keywords: anxiety, eye movements, threat, selective attention, hypervigilance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 359605
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/359605
ISSN: 0272-7358
PURE UUID: e9296fee-63f2-4071-a111-fe0074207168

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Date deposited: 07 Nov 2013 14:51
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 15:25

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Contributors

Author: Helen J. Richards
Author: Valerie Benson
Author: Nick Donnelly
Author: Julie A. Hadwin

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