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Face processing biases in social anxiety: an electrophysiological study
Authors:Moser Jason S  Huppert Jonathan D  Duval Elizabeth  Simons Robert F
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA. jmoser@udel.edu
Abstract:Studies of information processing biases in social anxiety suggest abnormal processing of negative and positive social stimuli. To further investigate these biases, behavioral performance and event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were measured, while high- and low-socially anxious individuals performed a modified version of the Erikson flanker task comprised of negative and positive facial expressions. While no group differences emerged on behavioral measures, ERP results revealed the presence of a negative face bias in socially anxious subjects as indexed by the parietally maximal attention- and memory-related P3/late positive potential. Additionally, non-anxious subjects evidenced the presence of a positive face bias as reflected in the centrally maximal early attention- and emotion-modulated P2 and the frontally maximal response monitoring-related correct response negativity. These results demonstrate the sensitivity of different processing stages to different biases in high- versus low-socially anxious individuals that may prove important in advancing models of anxious pathology.
Keywords:Social anxiety   Information processing biases   Event-related potentials   Attention   Response monitoring
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