Fear of negative evaluation and attentional bias for facial expressions: An event-related study

•We use a dot-probe paradigm to examine attentional biases in social anxiety.•We examine the P1 and P2 components in response to cues and P1 to targets.•Social anxiety individuals produce enhanced P1 in response to all facial pairs.•They also produce enhanced P2 in response to neutral–angry pairs.•P...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBrain and cognition Vol. 82; no. 3; pp. 344 - 352
Main Authors Rossignol, Mandy, Campanella, Salvatore, Bissot, Cécile, Philippot, Pierre
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amsterdam Elsevier Inc 01.08.2013
Elsevier
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Summary:•We use a dot-probe paradigm to examine attentional biases in social anxiety.•We examine the P1 and P2 components in response to cues and P1 to targets.•Social anxiety individuals produce enhanced P1 in response to all facial pairs.•They also produce enhanced P2 in response to neutral–angry pairs.•P1 in response to targets was enhanced after emotional cues in social anxiety. Numerous studies have shown an exacerbation of attentional bias towards threat in anxiety states. However, the cognitive mechanisms responsible for these attentional biases remain largely unknown. Further, the authors outline the need to consider the nature of the attentional processes in operation (hypervigilance, avoidance, or disengagement). We adapted a dot-probe paradigm to record behavioral and electrophysiological responses in 26 participants reporting high or low fear of evaluation, a major component of social anxiety. Pairs of faces including a neutral and an emotional face (displaying anger, fear, disgust, or happiness) were presented during 200ms and then replaced by a neutral target to discriminate. Results show that anxious participants were characterized by an increased P1 in response to pairs of faces, irrespective of the emotional expression included in the pair. They also showed an increased P2 in response to angry–neutral pairs selectively. Finally, in anxious participants, the P1 response to targets was enhanced when replacing emotional faces, whereas non-anxious subjects showed no difference between the two conditions. These results indicate an early hypervigilance to face stimuli in social anxiety, coupled with difficulty in disengaging from threat and sustained attention to emotional stimuli. They are discussed within the framework of current models of anxiety and psychopathology.
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ISSN:0278-2626
1090-2147
1090-2147
DOI:10.1016/j.bandc.2013.05.008