Literature DB >> 22390711

Flexible attention deployment in threatening contexts: an instructed fear conditioning study.

Tomer Shechner1, Tatiana Pelc, Daniel S Pine, Nathan A Fox, Yair Bar-Haim.   

Abstract

Factors leading humans to shift attention away from danger cues remain poorly understood. Two laboratory experiments reported here show that context interacts with learning experiences to shape attention avoidance of mild danger cues. The first experiment exposed 18 participants to contextual threat of electric shock. Attention allocation to mild danger cues was then assessed with the dot-probe task. Results showed that contextual threat caused subjects to avert attention from danger cues. In the second experiment, 36 participants were conditioned to the same contextual threat used in Experiment 1. These subjects then were randomly assigned to either an experimental group, trained to shift attention toward danger cues, or a placebo group exposed to the same stimuli without the training component. As in Experiment 1, contextual threat again caused attention allocation away from danger in the control group. However, this did not occur in the experimental group. These experiments show that acute contextual threat and learning experiences interact to shape the deployment of attention away from danger cues.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22390711      PMCID: PMC3488277          DOI: 10.1037/a0027072

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emotion        ISSN: 1528-3542


  37 in total

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  10 in total

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4.  The impact of aversive context on early threat detection in trauma exposed individuals and associations with post-traumatic stress symptoms.

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6.  For whom the bell tolls: Neurocognitive individual differences in the acute stress-reduction effects of an attention bias modification game for anxiety.

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7.  Modification of threat-processing in non-anxious individuals: a preliminary behavioral and ERP study.

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8.  Vigilance in the laboratory predicts avoidance in the real world: A dimensional analysis of neural, behavioral, and ecological momentary data in anxious youth.

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10.  The impact of anxiety upon cognition: perspectives from human threat of shock studies.

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  10 in total

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