• Title of article

    Selective attention to food-related stimuli in hunger: are attentional biases specific to emotional and psychopathological states, or are they also found in normal drive states?

  • Author/Authors

    Karin Mogg، نويسنده , , Brendan P. Bradley، نويسنده , , Harpfreet Hyare، نويسنده , , Hung Sui Lee، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    227
  • To page
    237
  • Abstract
    Previous work has indicated that anxiety disorders and eating disorders are associated with selective processing of stimuli relevant to patientsʹ concerns (e.g. Mathews and MacLeod, 1994; Annual Review of Psychology, 45, 25–50; Channon et al., 1988; British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 27, 259–260). A dot probe task was used to investigate whether attentional biases are also a feature of a normal drive state. Specifically, we examined whether hunger is associated with biases in selective attention and in pre-attentive processes for food-relevant stimuli. Subjects with high levels of hunger showed a greater attentional bias for food-related words presented in a suprathreshold exposure condition (words shown for 500 msec), in comparison with those with low hunger. There was no evidence in the present study of a hunger-related bias in pre-attentive processes (i.e. when words were shown for 14 msec and masked). Results suggest that a non-emotional motivational state, such as hunger, is associated with a bias in certain aspects of information processing, such as selective attention, for stimuli that are relevant to the motivational state. Findings are discussed in relation to recent research into emotion-related cognitive biases.
  • Keywords
    Drive , Selective attention , food , hunger , Attentional bias
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    Behaviour Research and Therapy
  • Record number

    569038