Biased Saccadic Responses to Emotional Stimuli in Anxiety: An Antisaccade Study

被引:55
作者
Chen, Nigel T. M. [1 ]
Clarke, Patrick J. F. [2 ]
Watson, Tamara L. [3 ]
MacLeod, Colin [2 ]
Guastella, Adam J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Brain & Mind Res Inst, Camperdown, NSW, Australia
[2] Univ Western Australia, Sch Psychol, Crawley, WA, Australia
[3] Univ Western Sydney, Sch Social Sci & Psychol, Penrith, NSW 1797, Australia
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词
ATTENTIONAL BIAS; SOCIAL ANXIETY; SELECTIVE ATTENTION; TRAIT ANXIETY; ANGRY FACES; INDIVIDUALS; VELOCITY; HAPPY; GAZE; TASK;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0086474
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Research suggests that anxiety is maintained by an attentional bias to threat, and a growing base of evidence suggests that anxiety may additionally be associated with the deficient attentional processing of positive stimuli. The present study sought to examine whether such anxiety-linked attentional biases were associated with either stimulus driven or attentional control mechanisms of attentional selectivity. High and low trait anxious participants completed an emotional variant of an antisaccade task, in which they were required to prosaccade towards, or antisaccade away from a positive, neutral or threat stimulus, while eye movements were recorded. While low anxious participants were found to be slower to saccade in response to positive stimuli, irrespectively of whether a pro- or antisaccade was required, such a bias was absent in high anxious individuals. Analysis of erroneous antisaccades further revealed at trend level, that anxiety was associated with reduced peak velocity in response to threat. The findings suggest that anxiety is associated with the aberrant processing of positive stimuli, and greater compensatory efforts in the inhibition of threat. The findings further highlight the relevance of considering saccade peak velocity in the assessment of anxiety-linked attentional processing.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 49 条
[1]   Social anxiety and the interpretation of positive social events [J].
Alden, Lynn E. ;
Taylor, Charles T. ;
Mellings, Tanna M. J. B. ;
Laposa, Judith M. .
JOURNAL OF ANXIETY DISORDERS, 2008, 22 (04) :577-590
[2]   Attention Training in Individuals With Generalized Social Phobia: A Randomized Controlled Trial [J].
Amir, Nader ;
Beard, Courtney ;
Taylor, Charles T. ;
Klumpp, Heide ;
Elias, Jason ;
Bums, Michelle ;
Chen, Xi .
JOURNAL OF CONSULTING AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 77 (05) :961-973
[3]   The neural correlates of cognitive effort in anxiety: Effects on processing efficiency [J].
Ansari, Tahereh L. ;
Derakshan, Nazanin .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 86 (03) :337-348
[4]  
Aupperle Robin L, 2010, Dialogues Clin Neurosci, V12, P517
[5]   Threat-related attentional bias in anxious and nonanxious individuals: A meta-analytic study [J].
Bar-Haim, Yair ;
Lamy, Dominique ;
Pergamin, Lee ;
Bakermans-Kranenburg, Marian J. ;
van IJzendoorn, Marinus H. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2007, 133 (01) :1-24
[6]   Reliability generalization of scores on the Spielberger state-trait anxiety inventory [J].
Barnes, LLB ;
Harp, D ;
Jung, WS .
EDUCATIONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL MEASUREMENT, 2002, 62 (04) :603-618
[7]   Affective attention under cognitive load: reduced emotional biases but emergent anxiety-related costs to inhibitory control [J].
Berggren, Nick ;
Richards, Anne ;
Taylor, Joseph ;
Derakshan, Nazanin .
FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2013, 7
[8]   Attentional control deficits in trait anxiety: Why you see them and why you don't [J].
Berggren, Nick ;
Derakshan, Nazanin .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 92 (03) :440-446
[9]   Neurocognitive mechanisms of anxiety: an integrative account [J].
Bishop, Sonia J. .
TRENDS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCES, 2007, 11 (07) :307-316
[10]   HAPPY BUT NOT SO APPROACHABLE: THE SOCIAL JUDGMENTS OF INDIVIDUALS WITH GENERALIZED SOCIAL PHOBIA [J].
Campbell, D. W. ;
Sareen, J. ;
Stein, M. B. ;
Kravetsky, L. B. ;
Paulus, M. P. ;
Hassard, S. T. ;
Reiss, J. P. .
DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY, 2009, 26 (05) :419-424