Literature DB >> 23356563

There's more to anxiety than meets the eye: isolating threat-related attentional engagement and disengagement biases.

Gal Sheppes1, Roy Luria, Keisuke Fukuda, James J Gross.   

Abstract

Threat-related attentional biases represent a basic survival mechanism. These biases include an engagement bias involving rapid direction of attention toward threat and a disengagement bias involving slow direction of attention away from threat. The exact nature of these biases in healthy and anxious individuals remains controversial because of the challenges associated with accurately isolating each of these attentional biases. Combining a cognitive attentional task with classical conditioning using electric stimulation, we created a new paradigm that makes it possible to more clearly isolate these attentional biases. Utilizing this novel paradigm, we detected both types of attentional bias and differentiated between levels of trait anxiety, in which low- and high-trait anxiety individuals showed equal levels of engagement bias, but only high-trait anxiety individuals showed impaired disengagement from threat.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23356563     DOI: 10.1037/a0031236

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


  9 in total

1.  Interactions of emotion and anxiety on visual working memory performance.

Authors:  Nick Berggren; Hannah M Curtis; Nazanin Derakshan
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2017-08

2.  Dispositional negativity, cognition, and anxiety disorders: An integrative translational neuroscience framework.

Authors:  Juyoen Hur; Melissa D Stockbridge; Andrew S Fox; Alexander J Shackman
Journal:  Prog Brain Res       Date:  2019-04-17       Impact factor: 2.453

3.  During vigilance to painful stimuli: slower response rate is related to high trait anxiety, whereas faster response rate is related to high state anxiety.

Authors:  Timothy J Meeker; Nichole M Emerson; Jui-Hong Chien; Mark I Saffer; Oscar Joseph Bienvenu; Anna Korzeniewska; Joel D Greenspan; Frederick Arthur Lenz
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2020-12-16       Impact factor: 2.714

4.  The Relationship Between Attentional Bias, Anxiety Sensitivity, and Depression and Anxiety Symptoms: Evidence From the COVID-19 Pandemic in China.

Authors:  Shiyi Li; Xiao Li
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2022-02-08

5.  Media multitasking, depression, and anxiety of college students: Serial mediating effects of attention control and negative information attentional bias.

Authors:  Shiyi Li; Lifang Fan
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2022-08-18       Impact factor: 5.435

6.  Auditory and cross-modal attentional bias toward positive natural sounds: Behavioral and ERP evidence.

Authors:  Yanmei Wang; Zhenwei Tang; Xiaoxuan Zhang; Libing Yang
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2022-07-29       Impact factor: 3.473

7.  The neurobiology of dispositional negativity and attentional biases to threat: Implications for understanding anxiety disorders in adults and youth.

Authors:  Alexander J Shackman; Melissa D Stockbridge; Rachael M Tillman; Claire M Kaplan; Do P M Tromp; Andrew S Fox; Matthias Gamer
Journal:  J Exp Psychopathol       Date:  2016

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

Authors:  Oliver J Robinson; Katherine Vytal; Brian R Cornwell; Christian Grillon
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2013-05-17       Impact factor: 3.169

9.  The Mediating Effects of Self-Esteem on Anxiety and Emotion Regulation.

Authors:  Blossom Fernandes; Jack Newton; Cecilia A Essau
Journal:  Psychol Rep       Date:  2021-02-24
  9 in total

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