Brief report. Time course of attentional bias for threat scenes: testing the vigilance-avoidance hypothesis.
Brief report. Time course of attentional bias for threat scenes: testing the vigilance-avoidance hypothesis.
The study tested the vigilance-avoidance hypothesis, which proposes that anxiety-related attentional biases vary over time (i.e., initial vigilance for high threat cues, followed by avoidance). To investigate this, pictorial stimuli, which included scenes of injury, violence, and death, were presented in a visual probe task for two exposure durations: 500 ms and 1500 ms. Results showed that, in comparison with low trait anxious participants, high trait anxious individuals were more vigilant for high threat scenes at the shorter exposure duration (500 ms), and showed no attentional bias at the longer duration. However, the results also indicated significant avoidance of high threat scenes at the longer exposure duration in participants with high levels of blood-injury fear. These findings are discussed in relation to recent research indicating that anxiety and fear may reflect two distinct aversive motivational systems, which may be characterised by different patterns of cognitive bias.
689-700
Mogg, Karin
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Miles, Felicity
9b614db5-da07-4ffe-9c13-961a66ce2c63
Dixon, Rachel
aff554a8-a81d-4a21-b597-72c7112ab17b
2004
Mogg, Karin
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Miles, Felicity
9b614db5-da07-4ffe-9c13-961a66ce2c63
Dixon, Rachel
aff554a8-a81d-4a21-b597-72c7112ab17b
Mogg, Karin, Bradley, Brendan P., Miles, Felicity and Dixon, Rachel
(2004)
Brief report. Time course of attentional bias for threat scenes: testing the vigilance-avoidance hypothesis.
Cognition and Emotion, 18 (5), .
(doi:10.1080/02699930341000158).
Abstract
The study tested the vigilance-avoidance hypothesis, which proposes that anxiety-related attentional biases vary over time (i.e., initial vigilance for high threat cues, followed by avoidance). To investigate this, pictorial stimuli, which included scenes of injury, violence, and death, were presented in a visual probe task for two exposure durations: 500 ms and 1500 ms. Results showed that, in comparison with low trait anxious participants, high trait anxious individuals were more vigilant for high threat scenes at the shorter exposure duration (500 ms), and showed no attentional bias at the longer duration. However, the results also indicated significant avoidance of high threat scenes at the longer exposure duration in participants with high levels of blood-injury fear. These findings are discussed in relation to recent research indicating that anxiety and fear may reflect two distinct aversive motivational systems, which may be characterised by different patterns of cognitive bias.
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Published date: 2004
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Local EPrints ID: 40180
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40180
ISSN: 0269-9931
PURE UUID: 314d138c-de96-4948-b109-aeb1b5318580
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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:19
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Author:
Felicity Miles
Author:
Rachel Dixon
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