Effects of threat cues on attentional shifting, disengagement and response slowing in anxious individuals
Effects of threat cues on attentional shifting, disengagement and response slowing in anxious individuals
According to cognitive models of anxiety, attentional biases for threat may cause or maintain anxiety states. Previous research using spatial cueing tasks has been interpreted in terms of difficulty in disengaging attention from threat in anxious individuals, as indicated by contrasts of response times (RTs) from threat cue versus neutral cue trials. However, on spatial cueing tasks, differences in RT between threat cue and neutral cue trials may stem from a slowing effect of threat on RT, as well as effects on allocation of visuospatial attention. The present study examined the effects of threat cues on both attentional cueing and response slowing. High and low anxious individuals completed a central cue task, which assessed threat-related response slowing, and a spatial cueing task, which assessed attentional biases for angry, happy and neutral faces. Results indicated that interpretation of the anxiety-related bias for threat depended on whether the effect of response slowing was taken into account. The study illustrates an important problem in using the modified spatial cueing task to assess components of threat-related attentional bias. As this experimental method may reflect both threat-related attentional cueing and response slowing effects, it cannot be assumed to provide pure measures of shift or disengagement components of attention bias.
656-667
Mogg, Karin
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Holmes, Amanda
9c8b19e7-c6cd-4470-bb43-53a2f518025d
Garner, Matthew
3221c5b3-b951-4fec-b456-ec449e4ce072
Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
May 2008
Mogg, Karin
5f1474af-85f5-4fd3-8eb6-0371be848e30
Holmes, Amanda
9c8b19e7-c6cd-4470-bb43-53a2f518025d
Garner, Matthew
3221c5b3-b951-4fec-b456-ec449e4ce072
Bradley, Brendan P.
bdacaa6c-528b-4086-9448-27ebfe463514
Mogg, Karin, Holmes, Amanda, Garner, Matthew and Bradley, Brendan P.
(2008)
Effects of threat cues on attentional shifting, disengagement and response slowing in anxious individuals.
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 46 (5), .
(doi:10.1016/j.brat.2008.02.011).
Abstract
According to cognitive models of anxiety, attentional biases for threat may cause or maintain anxiety states. Previous research using spatial cueing tasks has been interpreted in terms of difficulty in disengaging attention from threat in anxious individuals, as indicated by contrasts of response times (RTs) from threat cue versus neutral cue trials. However, on spatial cueing tasks, differences in RT between threat cue and neutral cue trials may stem from a slowing effect of threat on RT, as well as effects on allocation of visuospatial attention. The present study examined the effects of threat cues on both attentional cueing and response slowing. High and low anxious individuals completed a central cue task, which assessed threat-related response slowing, and a spatial cueing task, which assessed attentional biases for angry, happy and neutral faces. Results indicated that interpretation of the anxiety-related bias for threat depended on whether the effect of response slowing was taken into account. The study illustrates an important problem in using the modified spatial cueing task to assess components of threat-related attentional bias. As this experimental method may reflect both threat-related attentional cueing and response slowing effects, it cannot be assumed to provide pure measures of shift or disengagement components of attention bias.
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Published date: May 2008
Organisations:
Clinical Neurosciences
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Local EPrints ID: 70206
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/70206
ISSN: 0005-7967
PURE UUID: 3c350849-80e2-4bb3-9698-6283a250beac
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Date deposited: 28 Jan 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:46
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Author:
Amanda Holmes
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