Association between irritability and bias in attention orienting to threat in children and adolescents
Association between irritability and bias in attention orienting to threat in children and adolescents
Background
Irritability, a frequent complaint in children with psychiatric disorders, reflects increased predisposition to anger. Preliminary work in pediatric clinical samples links irritability to attention bias to threat, and the current study examines this association in a large population-based sample.
Methods
We studied 1,872 children (ages 6–14) using the Development and Well-Being Assessment (DAWBA), Childhood Behavior Checklist (CBCL), and dot-probe tasks. Irritability was defined using CBCL items that assessed temper tantrums and hot temper. The dot-probe task assessed attention biases for threat-related (angry face) stimuli. Multiple regression analysis was used to assess specificity of associations to irritability when adjusting for demographic variables and co-occurring psychiatric traits. Propensity score matching analysis was used to increase causal inference when matching for demographic variables and co-occurring psychiatric traits.
Results
Irritability was associated with increased attention bias toward threat-related cues. Multiple regression analysis suggests associations between irritability and threat bias are independent from demographic variables, anxiety, and externalizing traits (attention-deficit/hyperactivity, conduct, and headstrong/hurtful), but not from broad internalizing symptoms. Propensity score matching analysis indicated that this association was found for irritable versus nonirritable groups matched on demographic and co-occurring traits including internalizing symptoms.
Conclusions
Irritability in children is associated with biased attention toward threatening information. This finding, if replicated, warrants further investigation to examine the extent to which it contributes to chronic irritability and to explore possible treatment implications.
595-602
Salum, Giovanni A.
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Mogg, Karin
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Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Stringaris, Argyris
b813012e-7b67-432b-9799-2187bf675c30
Gadelha, Ary
27d5390a-66d1-4ed1-904e-8272ea048b29
Pan, Pedro M.
be4f9b26-fdfb-4d95-9527-269d9e95faea
Rohde, Luis A.
0cf3b1d3-7d83-4dc9-9cec-6d79276ead66
Polanczyk, Guilherme V.
794ddae7-f894-48fc-a90a-af190ab728a8
Manfro, Gisele G.
e1d72248-ebc3-491c-af23-d29c1a049e0f
Pine, Daniel S.
debffc1c-1efc-4bcf-81b3-87aadee1047d
Leibenluft, Ellen
c362a484-909b-4fbd-bcfd-814fedfe100f
1 May 2017
Salum, Giovanni A.
0f583594-247d-4b0d-b646-0bdac597c60d
Mogg, Karin
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Stringaris, Argyris
b813012e-7b67-432b-9799-2187bf675c30
Gadelha, Ary
27d5390a-66d1-4ed1-904e-8272ea048b29
Pan, Pedro M.
be4f9b26-fdfb-4d95-9527-269d9e95faea
Rohde, Luis A.
0cf3b1d3-7d83-4dc9-9cec-6d79276ead66
Polanczyk, Guilherme V.
794ddae7-f894-48fc-a90a-af190ab728a8
Manfro, Gisele G.
e1d72248-ebc3-491c-af23-d29c1a049e0f
Pine, Daniel S.
debffc1c-1efc-4bcf-81b3-87aadee1047d
Leibenluft, Ellen
c362a484-909b-4fbd-bcfd-814fedfe100f
Salum, Giovanni A., Mogg, Karin, Bradley, Brendan P., Stringaris, Argyris, Gadelha, Ary, Pan, Pedro M., Rohde, Luis A., Polanczyk, Guilherme V., Manfro, Gisele G., Pine, Daniel S. and Leibenluft, Ellen
(2017)
Association between irritability and bias in attention orienting to threat in children and adolescents.
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 58 (5), .
(doi:10.1111/jcpp.12659).
Abstract
Background
Irritability, a frequent complaint in children with psychiatric disorders, reflects increased predisposition to anger. Preliminary work in pediatric clinical samples links irritability to attention bias to threat, and the current study examines this association in a large population-based sample.
Methods
We studied 1,872 children (ages 6–14) using the Development and Well-Being Assessment (DAWBA), Childhood Behavior Checklist (CBCL), and dot-probe tasks. Irritability was defined using CBCL items that assessed temper tantrums and hot temper. The dot-probe task assessed attention biases for threat-related (angry face) stimuli. Multiple regression analysis was used to assess specificity of associations to irritability when adjusting for demographic variables and co-occurring psychiatric traits. Propensity score matching analysis was used to increase causal inference when matching for demographic variables and co-occurring psychiatric traits.
Results
Irritability was associated with increased attention bias toward threat-related cues. Multiple regression analysis suggests associations between irritability and threat bias are independent from demographic variables, anxiety, and externalizing traits (attention-deficit/hyperactivity, conduct, and headstrong/hurtful), but not from broad internalizing symptoms. Propensity score matching analysis indicated that this association was found for irritable versus nonirritable groups matched on demographic and co-occurring traits including internalizing symptoms.
Conclusions
Irritability in children is associated with biased attention toward threatening information. This finding, if replicated, warrants further investigation to examine the extent to which it contributes to chronic irritability and to explore possible treatment implications.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 23 September 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 October 2016
Published date: 1 May 2017
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 415949
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/415949
ISSN: 0021-9630
PURE UUID: 6db89342-33b3-476a-b272-5acc32af8aee
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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2017 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:19
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Contributors
Author:
Giovanni A. Salum
Author:
Argyris Stringaris
Author:
Ary Gadelha
Author:
Pedro M. Pan
Author:
Luis A. Rohde
Author:
Guilherme V. Polanczyk
Author:
Gisele G. Manfro
Author:
Daniel S. Pine
Author:
Ellen Leibenluft
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