We investigated the time course of selective attention to face regions during judgment of dis/approval by low (LSA) and high (HSA) social anxiety undergraduates (with clinical levels on questionnaire measures). The viewers’ gaze direction was assessed and the stimulus visual saliency of face regions was computed, for video-clips displaying dynamic facial expressions. Social anxiety was related to perception of disapproval from faces with an ambiguous smile (i.e. with non-happy eyes), but not those with congruent happy eyes and a smile. HSA observers selectively looked earlier at the eye region, whereas LSA ones preferentially looked at the smiling mouth. Consistently, gaze allocation was less related to visual saliency of the smile for HSA ...
Item does not contain fulltextPeople suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) are constantly wor...
The objective of this study was to examine attentional bias for threat in relation to social anxiety...
People suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) are constantly worried about how they come acros...
We investigated the time course of selective attention to face regions during judgment of dis/approv...
Fear of negative evaluation is the hallmark of social anxiety. We examined the hypothesis that, to f...
In 2 experiments, the authors tested predictions from cognitive models of social anxiety regarding a...
Item does not contain fulltextScientific evidence is equivocal on whether Social Anxiety Disorder (S...
Social attentional biases are a core component of social anxiety disorder, but research has not yet ...
Cognitive models assume that social anxiety is associated with and maintained by biased information ...
Hypervigilance and attentional bias to threat faces with low-spatial-frequency (LSF) information hav...
A growing theoretical and research literature suggests that trait and state social anxiety can predi...
Facial information and attention to facial displays are distributed over spatial as well as temporal...
A hypervigilance-avoidance theory has been proposed to explain early attentional biases towards face...
Although facial information is distributed over spatial as well as temporal domains, thus far resear...
Previous studies of social phobia have reported an increased vigilance to social threat cues but als...
Item does not contain fulltextPeople suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) are constantly wor...
The objective of this study was to examine attentional bias for threat in relation to social anxiety...
People suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) are constantly worried about how they come acros...
We investigated the time course of selective attention to face regions during judgment of dis/approv...
Fear of negative evaluation is the hallmark of social anxiety. We examined the hypothesis that, to f...
In 2 experiments, the authors tested predictions from cognitive models of social anxiety regarding a...
Item does not contain fulltextScientific evidence is equivocal on whether Social Anxiety Disorder (S...
Social attentional biases are a core component of social anxiety disorder, but research has not yet ...
Cognitive models assume that social anxiety is associated with and maintained by biased information ...
Hypervigilance and attentional bias to threat faces with low-spatial-frequency (LSF) information hav...
A growing theoretical and research literature suggests that trait and state social anxiety can predi...
Facial information and attention to facial displays are distributed over spatial as well as temporal...
A hypervigilance-avoidance theory has been proposed to explain early attentional biases towards face...
Although facial information is distributed over spatial as well as temporal domains, thus far resear...
Previous studies of social phobia have reported an increased vigilance to social threat cues but als...
Item does not contain fulltextPeople suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) are constantly wor...
The objective of this study was to examine attentional bias for threat in relation to social anxiety...
People suffering from social anxiety disorder (SAD) are constantly worried about how they come acros...