Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/121623
Title: Mechanisms of Selective Attention in Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Authors: Yiend, Jenny
Mathews, Andrew
Burns, Tom
Dutton, Kevin
Fernández Martín, Andrés 
Georgiou, George A.
Luckie, Michael
Rose, Alexandra
Russo, Riccardo
Fox, Elaine
UNESCO Clasification: 610604 Análisis experimental de la conducta
Keywords: Anxiety
Attention
Cognition and emotion
Emotional processing biases
Selective attention
Issue Date: 2015
Journal: Clinical Psychological Science 
Abstract: A well-established literature has identified different selective attentional orienting mechanisms underlying anxiety-related attentional bias, such as engagement and disengagement of attention. These mechanisms are thought to contribute to the onset and maintenance of anxiety disorders. However, conclusions to date have relied heavily on experimental work from subclinical samples. We therefore investigated individuals with diagnosed generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), healthy volunteers, and individuals with high trait anxiety (but not meeting GAD diagnostic criteria). Across two experiments we found faster disengagement from negative (angry and fearful) faces in GAD groups, an effect opposite to that expected on the basis of the subclinical literature. Together these data challenge current assumptions that we can generalize, to those with GAD, the pattern of selective attentional orienting to threat found in subclinical groups. We suggest a decisive two-stage experiment identifying stimuli of primary salience in GAD, then using these to reexamine orienting mechanisms across groups.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/121623
ISSN: 2167-7026
DOI: 10.1177/2167702614545216
Source: Clinical Psychological Science [ISSN 2167-7026], v. 3 (5), (2015)
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