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Time course of attentional bias in anxiety: Emotion and gender specificity
Authors:Sarah M. Sass  Wendy Heller  Jennifer L. Stewart  Rebecca Levin Silton  J. Christopher Edgar  Joscelyn E. Fisher  Gregory A. Miller
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign, Champaign, Illinois, USA;2. Beckman Institute Biomedical Imaging Center, University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign, Champaign, Illinois, USA
Abstract:Anxiety is characterized by cognitive biases, including attentional bias to emotional (especially threatening) stimuli. Accounts differ on the time course of attention to threat, but the literature generally confounds emotional valence and arousal and overlooks gender effects, both addressed in the present study. Nonpatients high in self‐reported anxious apprehension, anxious arousal, or neither completed an emotion‐word Stroop task during event‐related potential (ERP) recording. Hypotheses differentiated time course of preferential attention to emotional stimuli. Individuals high in anxious apprehension and anxious arousal showed distinct early ERP evidence of preferential processing of emotionally arousing stimuli along with some evidence for gender differences in processing. Healthy controls showed gender differences at both early and later processing stages. The conjunction of valence, arousal, and gender is critical in the time course of attentional bias.
Keywords:Anxiety  Emotion  EEG/ERP
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