کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
909587 | 917295 | 2013 | 7 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

• Clinical anxiety had no particular importance for the deployment of attention.
• This casts doubt on the universality of biased attention in older anxiety patients.
• There was a marginal reduction in bias toward threat words following CBT.
• This reduction did not occur among those in the wait list condition.
• Attentional biases are fragile and contingent upon task and participant features.
Attentional biases are known to play a contributing, and perhaps even causal role in the etiology of anxiety and other negative affective states. The prevalence of anxiety disorders in the older cohort is growing, and there are both theoretical and empirical reasons to suspect that age-related factors could moderate attentional bias effects in the context of late-life anxiety. The current study included one of the most widely-used measures of attentional bias, the dot-probe task (Mathews & MacLeod, 1985). Participants were older adults who were either nonanxious or diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder. The patient subsample also completed cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) or an equivalent wait list condition, after which the dot probe was administered a second time. Results showed that clinical anxiety had no particular importance for the deployment of attention, casting doubt on the universality of biased attention in older anxiety patients. Although there were no maladaptive biases detected toward either threat or depression words at pretreatment, there was nevertheless a marginally significant differential reduction in bias toward threat words following CBT. This reduction did not occur among those in the wait list condition. Implications are discussed.
Journal: Journal of Anxiety Disorders - Volume 27, Issue 6, August 2013, Pages 585–591