Literature DB >> 29022722

The impact of negative affect on attention patterns to threat across the first 2 years of life.

Koraly Pérez-Edgar1, Santiago Morales1, Vanessa LoBue2, Bradley C Taber-Thomas1, Elizabeth K Allen3, Kayla M Brown1, Kristin A Buss1.   

Abstract

The current study examined the relations between individual differences in attention to emotion faces and temperamental negative affect across the first 2 years of life. Infant studies have noted a normative pattern of preferential attention to salient cues, particularly angry faces. A parallel literature suggests that elevated attention bias to threat is associated with anxiety, particularly if coupled with temperamental risk. Examining the emerging relations between attention to threat and temperamental negative affect may help distinguish normative from at-risk patterns of attention. Infants (N = 145) ages 4 to 24 months (M = 12.93 months, SD = 5.57) completed an eye-tracking task modeled on the attention bias "dot-probe" task used with older children and adults. With age, infants spent greater time attending to emotion faces, particularly threat faces. All infants displayed slower latencies to fixate to incongruent versus congruent probes. Neither relation was moderated by temperament. Trial-by-trial analyses found that dwell time to the face was associated with latency to orient to subsequent probes, moderated by the infant's age and temperament. In young infants low in negative affect longer processing of angry faces was associated with faster subsequent fixation to probes; young infants high in negative affect displayed the opposite pattern at trend. Findings suggest that although age was directly associated with an emerging bias to threat, the impact of processing threat on subsequent orienting was associated with age and temperament. Early patterns of attention may shape how children respond to their environments, potentially via attention's gate-keeping role in framing a child's social world for processing. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29022722      PMCID: PMC5705474          DOI: 10.1037/dev0000408

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Psychol        ISSN: 0012-1649


  66 in total

1.  Patterns of sustained attention in infancy shape the developmental trajectory of social behavior from toddlerhood through adolescence.

Authors:  Koraly Pérez-Edgar; Jennifer N Martin McDermott; Katherine Korelitz; Kathryn A Degnan; Timothy W Curby; Daniel S Pine; Nathan A Fox
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2010-11

2.  Links between infant temperament and neurophysiological measures of attention to happy and fearful faces.

Authors:  Marina Martinos; Anna Matheson; Michelle de Haan
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2012-08-17       Impact factor: 8.982

3.  Developmental Differences in Infants' Attention to Social and Nonsocial Threats.

Authors:  Vanessa LoBue; Kristin A Buss; Bradley C Taber-Thomas; Koraly Pérez-Edgar
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2016-10-12

4.  Maternal anxiety predicts attentional bias towards threat in infancy.

Authors:  Santiago Morales; Kayla M Brown; Bradley C Taber-Thomas; Vanessa LoBue; Kristin A Buss; Koraly E Pérez-Edgar
Journal:  Emotion       Date:  2017-02-16

5.  Does women's greater fear of snakes and spiders originate in infancy?

Authors:  David H Rakison
Journal:  Evol Hum Behav       Date:  2009-11-01       Impact factor: 4.178

6.  Superior detection of threat-relevant stimuli in infancy.

Authors:  Vanessa LoBue; Judy S DeLoache
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2010-01-01

7.  The narrow fellow in the grass: human infants associate snakes and fear.

Authors:  Judy S Deloache; Vanessa Lobue
Journal:  Dev Sci       Date:  2009-01

8.  Attention to Faces Expressing Negative Emotion at 7 Months Predicts Attachment Security at 14 Months.

Authors:  Mikko J Peltola; Linda Forssman; Kaija Puura; Marinus H van IJzendoorn; Jukka M Leppänen
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2015-05-22

9.  Infants' neural responses to facial emotion in the prefrontal cortex are correlated with temperament: a functional near-infrared spectroscopy study.

Authors:  Miranda M Ravicz; Katherine L Perdue; Alissa Westerlund; Ross E Vanderwert; Charles A Nelson
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-07-20

10.  Using Eye Tracking to Understand Infants' Attentional Bias for Faces.

Authors:  Jukka M Leppänen
Journal:  Child Dev Perspect       Date:  2016-04-15
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  13 in total

1.  Temperament moderates developmental changes in vigilance to emotional faces in infants: Evidence from an eye-tracking study.

Authors:  Xiaoxue Fu; Santiago Morales; Vanessa LoBue; Kristin A Buss; Koraly Pérez-Edgar
Journal:  Dev Psychobiol       Date:  2019-09-17       Impact factor: 3.038

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.  Stationary and ambulatory attention patterns are differentially associated with early temperamental risk for socioemotional problems: Preliminary evidence from a multimodal eye-tracking investigation.

Authors:  Xiaoxue Fu; Eric E Nelson; Marcela Borge; Kristin A Buss; Koraly Pérez-Edgar
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2019-05-17

Review 4.  The Transdiagnostic Origins of Anxiety and Depression During the Pediatric Period: Linking NIMH Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) Constructs to Ecological Systems.

Authors:  Jenalee R Doom; Michelle Rozenman; Kathryn R Fox; Tiffany Phu; Anni R Subar; Deborah Seok; Kenia M Rivera
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2021-12-07

5.  Mobile Eye Tracking Captures Changes in Attention Over Time During a Naturalistic Threat Paradigm in Behaviorally Inhibited Children.

Authors:  Kelley E Gunther; Kayla M Brown; Xiaoxue Fu; Leigha MacNeill; Morgan Jones; Briana Ermanni; Koraly Pérez-Edgar
Journal:  Affect Sci       Date:  2021-10-06

6.  Individual differences in infancy research: Letting the baby stand out from the crowd.

Authors:  Koraly Pérez-Edgar; Alicia Vallorani; Kristin A Buss; Vanessa LoBue
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2020-05-04

7.  Threat-related Attention Bias in Socioemotional Development: A Critical Review and Methodological Considerations.

Authors:  Xiaoxue Fu; Koraly Pérez-Edgar
Journal:  Dev Rev       Date:  2018-12-12

Review 8.  Understanding the Emergence of Social Anxiety in Children With Behavioral Inhibition.

Authors:  Nathan A Fox; George A Buzzell; Santiago Morales; Emilio A Valadez; McLennon Wilson; Heather A Henderson
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2020-10-10       Impact factor: 13.382

9.  Mapping the Specific Pathways to Early-Onset Mental Health Disorders: The "Watch Me Grow for REAL" Study Protocol.

Authors:  Frances L Doyle; Antonio Mendoza Diaz; Valsamma Eapen; Paul J Frick; Eva R Kimonis; David J Hawes; Caroline Moul; Jenny L Richmond; Divya Mehta; Sinia Sareen; Bronte G Morgan; Mark R Dadds
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2020-06-19       Impact factor: 4.157

10.  Three-month-old infants show enhanced behavioral and neural sensitivity to fearful faces.

Authors:  Kristina Safar; Margaret C Moulson
Journal:  Dev Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2020-01-28       Impact factor: 6.464

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