| Literature DB >> 26493339 |
Tomer Shechner1, Johanna M Jarcho2, Stuart Wong2, Ellen Leibenluft3, Daniel S Pine2, Eric E Nelson2.
Abstract
The current study examines anxiety and age associations with attention allocation and physiological response to threats and rewards. Twenty-two healthy-adults, 20 anxious-adults, 26 healthy-youth, and 19 anxious-youth completed two eye-tracking tasks. In the Visual Scene Task (VST), participants' fixations were recorded while they viewed a central neutral image flanked by two threatening or two rewarding stimuli. In the Negative Words Task (NWT), physiological response was measured by means of pupil diameter change while negative and neutral words were presented. For both tasks, no interaction was found between anxiety and age-group. In the VST, anxious participants avoided the threatening images when groups were collapsed across age. Similarly, adults but not adolescents avoided the threatening images when collapsed across anxiety. No differences were found for rewarding images. In NWT, all subjects demonstrated increase in pupil dilation after word presentation. Only main effect of age emerged with stronger pupil dilation in adults than children. Finally, maximum pupil change was correlated with threat avoidance bias in the scene task. Gaze patterns and pupil dilation show that anxiety and age are associated with attention allocation to threats. The relations between attention and autonomic arousal point to a complex interaction between bottom-up and top-down processes as they relate to attention allocation.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Attention allocation; Development; Eye tracking; Pupil dilation; Social and non-social stimuli
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26493339 PMCID: PMC5104661 DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2015.10.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Psychol ISSN: 0301-0511 Impact factor: 3.251