Cognitive models posit that social anxiety disorder (SAD) is associated with and maintained by biased attention allocation vis-à-vis social threat. However, over the last decade, there has been intense debate regarding whether AB in SAD results from preferential engagement with or difficulty in disengaging from social threat. Further, recent evidence suggests that AB may merely result from top-down attentional impairments vis-à-vis non-emotional material. Consequently, uncertainty still abounds regarding both the relative importance and the mutual interactions of these different processes and SAD symptoms. Inspired by novel network approaches to psychopathology that conceptualize symptoms as complex dynamic systems of mutually interacting v...
The objective of this study was to examine attentional bias for threat in relation to social anxiety...
As proposed in a prominent developmental model, social anxiety has different manifestations: social ...
Hypervigilance and attentional bias to threat faces with low-spatial-frequency (LSF) information hav...
People with social anxiety disorder (SAD) exhibit an attentional bias for threat (AB). Nevertheless,...
The hallmark symptoms of social anxiety disorder (SAD) are fear and avoidance of social evaluative s...
In social anxiety disorder (SAD), anxiety reactions are triggered by attentional bias to social thre...
Emotion regulation is thought to involve communication between and within large-scale brain networks...
Despite the established relationship between social anxiety and attentional bias towards threat, a g...
Theories about the involvement of attention in fear and anxiety feelings have been in philosophical ...
Objective: Network analysis allows us to identify the most interconnected (i.e., central) symptoms, ...
A vast amount of research has found links between anxiety and attention biases towards threatening s...
The Clark and Wells (1995) model of social anxiety disorder postulates that three types of maladapti...
The integrated aetiological and maintenance (IAM) model of social anxiety disorder (SAD) conceptuali...
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a prevalent psychiatric condition, which causes considerablesufferi...
Background/objectives: Current models of SAD assume that attentional processes play a pivotal role i...
The objective of this study was to examine attentional bias for threat in relation to social anxiety...
As proposed in a prominent developmental model, social anxiety has different manifestations: social ...
Hypervigilance and attentional bias to threat faces with low-spatial-frequency (LSF) information hav...
People with social anxiety disorder (SAD) exhibit an attentional bias for threat (AB). Nevertheless,...
The hallmark symptoms of social anxiety disorder (SAD) are fear and avoidance of social evaluative s...
In social anxiety disorder (SAD), anxiety reactions are triggered by attentional bias to social thre...
Emotion regulation is thought to involve communication between and within large-scale brain networks...
Despite the established relationship between social anxiety and attentional bias towards threat, a g...
Theories about the involvement of attention in fear and anxiety feelings have been in philosophical ...
Objective: Network analysis allows us to identify the most interconnected (i.e., central) symptoms, ...
A vast amount of research has found links between anxiety and attention biases towards threatening s...
The Clark and Wells (1995) model of social anxiety disorder postulates that three types of maladapti...
The integrated aetiological and maintenance (IAM) model of social anxiety disorder (SAD) conceptuali...
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a prevalent psychiatric condition, which causes considerablesufferi...
Background/objectives: Current models of SAD assume that attentional processes play a pivotal role i...
The objective of this study was to examine attentional bias for threat in relation to social anxiety...
As proposed in a prominent developmental model, social anxiety has different manifestations: social ...
Hypervigilance and attentional bias to threat faces with low-spatial-frequency (LSF) information hav...