Title of article
Fear-relevant selective associations and social anxiety: Absence of a positive bias
Author/Authors
Matthew Garner، نويسنده , , Karin Mogg، نويسنده , , Brendan P. Bradley، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
17
From page
201
To page
217
Abstract
An illusory correlation paradigm was used to compare high and low socially anxious individuals’ initial, on-line and a posteriori covariation estimates between emotional faces and aversive, pleasant and neutral outcomes. Overall, participants demonstrated an initial expectancy bias for aversive outcomes following angry faces, and pleasant outcomes following happy faces. On-line expectancy biases indicated that initial biases were extinguished during the task, with the exception of low socially anxious individuals who continued to over-associate positive social cues with pleasant outcomes. In addition to lacking this protective positive on-line bias, the high social anxiety group reported retrospectively more negative social cues than the low socially anxious group. Findings are discussed in relation to similar evidence from recent interpretive and memory paradigms.
Keywords
Faces , On-line bias , Covariation bias , Social anxiety
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Record number
569932
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