• Title of article

    Affective primes suppress attention bias to threat in socially anxious individuals

  • Author/Authors

    Sarah M. Helfinstein، نويسنده , , Lauren K. White، نويسنده , , Yair Bar-Haim، نويسنده , , Nathan A. Fox، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    799
  • To page
    810
  • Abstract
    Anxious individuals show an attention bias towards threatening information. However, under conditions of sustained environmental threat this otherwise-present attention bias disappears. It remains unclear whether this suppression of attention bias can be caused by a transient activation of the fear system. In the present experiment, high socially anxious and low socially anxious individuals (HSA group, n=12; LSA group, n=12) performed a modified dot-probe task in which they were shown either a neutral or socially threatening prime word prior to each trial. EEG was collected and ERP components to the prime and faces displays were computed. HSA individuals showed an attention bias to threat after a neutral prime, but no attention bias after a threatening prime, demonstrating that suppression of attention bias can occur after a transient activation of the fear system. LSA individuals showed an opposite pattern: no evidence of a bias to threat with neutral primes but induction of an attention bias to threat following threatening primes. ERP results suggested differential processing of the prime and faces displays by HSA and LSA individuals. However, no group by prime interaction was found for any of ERP components.
  • Keywords
    Social anxietyAttention biasThreatSocial information processingPriming
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Record number

    570389