Title of article :
Anxiety-related differences in affective categorizations of lexical stimuli
Author/Authors :
Gina M. Manguno-Mire، نويسنده , , Joseph I. Constans، نويسنده , , James H. Geer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
17
From page :
197
To page :
213
Abstract :
Effects of emotional valence on attention have been shown to occur even when stimuli are presented outside awareness. The impact of negative valence on stimulus processing has been demonstrated to be particularly salient in anxiety. Therefore, it has been hypothesized that compared to nonanxious individuals, anxious individuals have an enhanced ability to detect the valence of negative stimuli. However, it remains unclear whether anxious individuals are better at identifying the valence of threatening stimuli or, rather, more likely to label ambiguous stimuli as threatening. To investigate these hypotheses, high and low anxious participants categorized lexical stimuli as “safe” or “dangerous.” Stimuli were presented at durations that allowed for both conscious (unmasked) and nonconscious (masked) processing. Results show that on masked trials, anxious individuals evidenced an enhanced ability to correctly classify threatening information, whereas nonanxious participants demonstrated an enhanced ability to correctly classify neutral or positive information. Signal detection analyses indicated results were explained by a response bias, whereby anxious individuals were more likely than nonanxious individuals to categorize masked words as threatening and nonanxious individuals were more likely to categorize masked words as nonthreatening. No group differences for nonword stimuli emerged, suggesting that anxiety-related response bias tendencies are activated only after detection of a weak semantic signal.
Keywords :
Affective decision task , Semantic judgments , INFORMATION PROCESSING , Anxiety , Emotion , cognition
Journal title :
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Record number :
569818
Link To Document :
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