Shifty Eyes: The Impact of Intolerance of Uncertainty on Gaze Behaviour During Threat Conditioning
Shifty Eyes: The Impact of Intolerance of Uncertainty on Gaze Behaviour During Threat Conditioning
Previous research has demonstrated that individuals with high levels of Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) have difficulty updating threat associations to safety associations. Notably, prior research has focused on measuring IU-related differences in threat and safety learning using arousal-based measures such as skin conductance response. Here we assessed whether IU-related differences in threat and safety learning could be captured using eye-tracking metrics linked with gaze behaviours such as dwelling and scanning. Participants (N = 144) completed self-report questionnaires assessing levels of IU and trait anxiety. Eye movements were then recorded during each conditioning phase: acquisition, extinction learning, and extinction retention. Fixation count and fixation duration served as indices of conditioned responding. Patterns of threat and safety learning typically reported for physiology and self-report were observed for the fixation count and fixation duration metrics during acquisition and to some extent in extinction learning, but not for extinction retention. There was little evidence for specific associations between IU and disrupted safety learning (e.g., greater differential responses to the threat vs. safe cues during extinction learning and retention). While there was tentative evidence that IU was associated with shorter fixation durations (e.g., scanning) to threat vs. safe cues during extinction retention, this effect did not remain after controlling for trait anxiety. IU and trait anxiety similarly predicted greater fixation count and shorter fixation durations overall during extinction learning, and greater fixation count overall during extinction retention. IU further predicted shorter fixation durations overall during extinction retention. However, the only IU-based effect that remained significant after controlling for trait anxiety was that of fixation duration overall during threat extinction learning. Our results inform models of anxiety, particularly in relation to how individual differences modulate gaze behaviour during threat conditioning.
dwelling, extinction learning, extinction retention, eye-tracking, fixation count, fixation duration, gaze, intolerance of uncertainty, scanning, threat acquisition, trait anxiety
Rodriguez-Sobstel, Claudia
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Wake, Shannon
b0425fcc-1bc7-4982-add5-e8affb055d50
Dodd, Helen
db72e2f5-f249-4b4e-a54b-addc96f7bc47
McSorley, Eugene
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van Reekum, Carien
923090a2-5be6-428d-a620-c598e2c2d737
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
13 July 2023
Rodriguez-Sobstel, Claudia
db2933e9-aa12-4031-9687-2933bc8ab8f7
Wake, Shannon
b0425fcc-1bc7-4982-add5-e8affb055d50
Dodd, Helen
db72e2f5-f249-4b4e-a54b-addc96f7bc47
McSorley, Eugene
e510da20-a293-4441-a94a-4cdea5c51619
van Reekum, Carien
923090a2-5be6-428d-a620-c598e2c2d737
Morriss, Jayne
a6005806-07cf-4283-8766-900003a7306f
Rodriguez-Sobstel, Claudia, Wake, Shannon, Dodd, Helen, McSorley, Eugene, van Reekum, Carien and Morriss, Jayne
(2023)
Shifty Eyes: The Impact of Intolerance of Uncertainty on Gaze Behaviour During Threat Conditioning.
Collabra: Psychology, 9 (1), [82229].
(doi:10.1525/collabra.82229).
Abstract
Previous research has demonstrated that individuals with high levels of Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) have difficulty updating threat associations to safety associations. Notably, prior research has focused on measuring IU-related differences in threat and safety learning using arousal-based measures such as skin conductance response. Here we assessed whether IU-related differences in threat and safety learning could be captured using eye-tracking metrics linked with gaze behaviours such as dwelling and scanning. Participants (N = 144) completed self-report questionnaires assessing levels of IU and trait anxiety. Eye movements were then recorded during each conditioning phase: acquisition, extinction learning, and extinction retention. Fixation count and fixation duration served as indices of conditioned responding. Patterns of threat and safety learning typically reported for physiology and self-report were observed for the fixation count and fixation duration metrics during acquisition and to some extent in extinction learning, but not for extinction retention. There was little evidence for specific associations between IU and disrupted safety learning (e.g., greater differential responses to the threat vs. safe cues during extinction learning and retention). While there was tentative evidence that IU was associated with shorter fixation durations (e.g., scanning) to threat vs. safe cues during extinction retention, this effect did not remain after controlling for trait anxiety. IU and trait anxiety similarly predicted greater fixation count and shorter fixation durations overall during extinction learning, and greater fixation count overall during extinction retention. IU further predicted shorter fixation durations overall during extinction retention. However, the only IU-based effect that remained significant after controlling for trait anxiety was that of fixation duration overall during threat extinction learning. Our results inform models of anxiety, particularly in relation to how individual differences modulate gaze behaviour during threat conditioning.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 13 June 2023
Published date: 13 July 2023
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
This research was supported by: (1) a NARSAD grant from the Brain and Behaviour Research Foundation, USA (27567) and an ESRC New Investigator, UK Grant (ES/R01145/1) awarded to Jayne Morriss, and (2) an ESRC Future Leaders Grant (ES/L010119/1) awarded to Helen Dodd. No funding was received to assist with the preparation of this manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 University of California Press. All rights reserved.
Keywords:
dwelling, extinction learning, extinction retention, eye-tracking, fixation count, fixation duration, gaze, intolerance of uncertainty, scanning, threat acquisition, trait anxiety
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Local EPrints ID: 480102
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480102
ISSN: 2474-7394
PURE UUID: d69265f4-77fe-4b5c-87f0-3ae9c54b0fbb
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 16:48
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 02:15
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Contributors
Author:
Claudia Rodriguez-Sobstel
Author:
Shannon Wake
Author:
Helen Dodd
Author:
Eugene McSorley
Author:
Carien van Reekum
Author:
Jayne Morriss
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