Malleability of Attentional Bias for Positive Emotional Information and Anxiety Vulnerability

被引:63
|
作者
Taylor, Charles T. [1 ]
Bomyea, Jessica [1 ]
Amir, Nader [1 ]
机构
[1] San Diego State Univ, SDSU UCSD Joint Doctoral Program Clin Psychol, San Diego, CA 92120 USA
关键词
anxiety vulnerability; attention; positive; individual differences; social anxiety; GENERALIZED SOCIAL PHOBIA; SELECTIVE ATTENTION; FACIAL EXPRESSIONS; EXPERIMENTAL MANIPULATION; MODIFICATION PROGRAM; VISUAL-ATTENTION; SELF-REPORT; INDIVIDUALS; DEPRESSION; HAPPY;
D O I
10.1037/a0021301
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Recent research supports a causal link between attentional bias for negative emotional information and anxiety vulnerability. However, little is known about the role of positive emotional processing in modulating anxiety reactivity to stress. In the current study, we used an attentional training paradigm designed to experimentally manipulate the processing of positive emotional cues. Participants were randomly assigned to complete a computerized probe detection task designed to induce selective processing of positive stimuli or to a sham condition. Following training, participants were exposed to a laboratory stressor (i.e., videotaped speech), and state anxiety and positive affect in response to the stressor were assessed. Results revealed that individual variability in the capacity to develop an attentional bias for positive information following training predicted subsequent emotional responses to the stressor. Moreover, individual differences in social anxiety, but not depression, moderated the effects of the attentional manipulation, such that, higher levels of social anxiety were associated with diminished attentional allocation toward positive cues. The current findings point to the potential value of considering the role of positive emotional processing in anxiety vulnerability.
引用
收藏
页码:127 / 138
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Biased attentional engagement with, and disengagement from, negative information: Independent cognitive pathways to anxiety vulnerability?
    Rudaizky, Daniel
    Basanovic, Julian
    MacLeod, Colin
    COGNITION & EMOTION, 2014, 28 (02) : 245 - 259
  • [22] Attentional bias modification in anxiety disorders and depression: A synthetic review of literature
    Blairy, Sylvie
    ANNALES MEDICO-PSYCHOLOGIQUES, 2017, 175 (06): : 522 - 527
  • [23] The effects of emotion on attention: A review of attentional processing of emotional information
    Yiend, Jenny
    COGNITION & EMOTION, 2010, 24 (01) : 3 - 47
  • [24] Investigating the attentional bias and information processing mechanism of mobile phone addicts towards emotional information
    Hu, Yixin
    Guo, Jiahui
    Jou, Min
    Zhou, Shengqi
    Wang, Dawei
    Maguire, Phil
    Wei, Jing
    Qu, Fangzheng
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2020, 110 (110)
  • [25] "Unpacking" cultural differences in social anxiety between Japanese and European Americans: the roles of threat appraisal and attentional bias
    Krieg, Alexander
    Xu, Yiyuan
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 14
  • [26] Prepared for the Best: Readiness To Modify Attentional Processing and Reduction in Anxiety Vulnerability in Response to Therapy
    Clarke, Patrick J. F.
    Chen, Nigel T. M.
    Guastella, Adam J.
    EMOTION, 2012, 12 (03) : 487 - 494
  • [27] Eye tracking evidence of threat-related attentional bias in anxiety- and fear-related disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    Clauss, Kate
    Gorday, Julia Y.
    Bardeen, Joseph R.
    CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 2022, 93
  • [28] Attentional bias modification in reducing test anxiety vulnerability: a randomized controlled trial
    Wenpeng Cai
    Yu Pan
    Huangyangzi Chai
    Yi Cui
    Jin Yan
    Wei Dong
    Guanghui Deng
    BMC Psychiatry, 18
  • [29] Attentional Bias and Complicated Grief: A Primed Dot-Probe Task with Emotional Faces
    Bullock, Ashley B.
    Bonanno, George A.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2013, 4 (02): : 194 - 207
  • [30] Task relevance of emotional information affects anxiety-linked attention bias in visual search
    Dodd, Helen F.
    Vogt, Julia
    Turkileri, Nilgun
    Notebaert, Lies
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 122 : 13 - 20