Probing the attentional control theory in social anxiety: An emotional saccade task

被引:0
|
作者
Matthias J. Wieser
Paul Pauli
Andreas Mühlberger
机构
[1] University of Würzburg,Department of Psychology, Biological Psychology, Clinical Psychology, and Psychotherapy
关键词
Facial Expression; Social Anxiety; Social Phobia; Attentional Control; Anxious Individual;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Volitional attentional control has been found to rely on prefrontal neuronal circuits. According to the attentional control theory of anxiety, impairment in the volitional control of attention is a prominent feature in anxiety disorders. The present study investigated this assumption in socially anxious individuals using an emotional saccade task with facial expressions (happy, angry, fearful, sad, neutral). The gaze behavior of participants was recorded during the emotional saccade task, in which participants performed either pro- or antisaccades in response to peripherally presented facial expressions. The results show that socially anxious persons have difficulties in inhibiting themselves to reflexively attend to facial expressions: They made more erratic prosaccades to all facial expressions when an antisaccade was required. Thus, these findings indicate impaired attentional control in social anxiety. Overall, the present study shows a deficit of socially anxious individuals in attentional control—for example, in inhibiting the reflexive orienting to neutral as well as to emotional facial expressions. This result may be due to a dysfunction in the prefrontal areas being involved in attentional control.
引用
收藏
页码:314 / 322
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] THE HIDDEN COSTS OF ANXIETY ON COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE: IMPLICATIONS FOR ATTENTIONAL CONTROL THEORY
    Ansari, Tahereh L.
    Derakshan, Nazanin
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2009, 46 : S96 - S96
  • [42] THE APPLICATION OF ATTENTIONAL CONTROL THEORY FOR ANXIETY IN CORNELIA DE LANGE SYNDROME
    Groves, L.
    Moss, J.
    Crawford, H.
    Royston, R.
    Waite, J.
    Bradley, L.
    Thomas, A.
    Moss, K.
    Oliver, C.
    JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY RESEARCH, 2019, 63 (09) : 1081 - 1082
  • [43] Attentional control associated with core cognitive maintenance factors of social anxiety
    Sluis, Rachel A.
    Boschen, Mark J.
    Neumann, David L.
    Murphy, Karen
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2018, 9 (04):
  • [44] Eye-Tracking Based Visual Search Training in Social Anxiety: Effects on Attentional Bias, Attentional Control, Gaze Behavior, and Anxious Responses to a Speech Task
    Li, Ting-Xun
    Liang, Chi-Wen
    COGNITIVE THERAPY AND RESEARCH, 2025, 49 (01) : 62 - 74
  • [45] Socioeconomic status and social anxiety: attentional control as a key missing variable?
    Claes, Nele
    Smeding, A.
    Carre, A.
    ANXIETY STRESS AND COPING, 2023, 36 (04): : 519 - 532
  • [46] Temperament, anxiety, and attentional control
    Healy, B
    Kulig, J
    PSYCHOLOGICAL REPORTS, 2006, 98 (01) : 23 - 29
  • [47] The Impact of Childhood Anxiety on Processes of Attentional Executive Control in the Presence of Emotional Face Distractors
    Susa-Erdogan, Georgiana
    Beng'a, Oana
    Mone, Ionut
    Miclea, Mircea
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2016, 7 (03): : 404 - 422
  • [48] Inhibitory attentional control under cognitive load in social anxiety: An investigation using a novel dual-task paradigm.
    Liang, Chi-Wen
    BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 2021, 144
  • [49] Avoidance of emotional facial expressions in social anxiety: The Approach-Avoidance Task
    Heuer, Kathrin
    Rinck, Mike
    Becker, Eni S.
    BEHAVIOUR RESEARCH AND THERAPY, 2007, 45 (12) : 2990 - 3001
  • [50] Attentional control moderates the relationship between social anxiety symptoms and attentional disengagement from threatening information
    Taylor, Charles T.
    Cross, Karalani
    Amir, Nader
    JOURNAL OF BEHAVIOR THERAPY AND EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHIATRY, 2016, 50 : 68 - 76