Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10445179 | Behaviour Research and Therapy | 2005 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Cognitive studies about anxiety suggest that the interplay between automatic and strategic biases in attention to threat is related to the persistence of fear. In the present study, the time-course of attention to pictures with varying threat levels was investigated in high trait anxious (HTA, n=21) and low trait anxious (LTA, n=22) students. In a visual probe detection task, high and mild threat pictures were presented at three durations: 100, 500, and 1250Â ms. Results indicated that all individuals attended to the high threat pictures for the 100Â ms condition. Differential responding between HTA and LTA individuals was found for the 500Â ms condition: only HTA individuals showed an attentional bias for mild threatening stimuli. For the 1250Â ms condition, the HTA individuals attended away from high and mild threat pictures. The observed pattern of differential attention to threatening pictures may explain the persistence of fear in HTA individuals.
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Authors
Ernst H.W. Koster, Bruno Verschuere, Geert Crombez, Stefaan Van Damme,