An experiment was conducted to examine processing strategy differences in anxiety. The sentence–picture verification task was modified to incorporate a block of threat-related trials (involving a knife and a rifle) and a block of neutral trials (involving a truck and a chair). It was predicted that the high-trait, relative to low-trait, anxious individuals would prefer to use a linguistic strategy for threat-related as compared to neutral trials. In addition, the idea that an image-based strategy is more important for processing emotional material was examined. There was some support for both of these hypotheses
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
Few studies have directly examined the relationship between trait anxiety and explicit memory for em...
Four experiments investigating the detailed nature of the attentional bias in anxiety are reported. ...
We investigated selective attention for masked and unmasked, threat, and positively valenced words, ...
Attentional biases for threat were examined in a non-clinical sample (N=60), with each participant t...
In the present study, we explored the proposition that an individual’s capacity for threat detection...
Two experiments evaluated differential predictions from two cognitive formulations of anxiety. Accor...
Several theories hypothesize an excessive allocation of attention toward threatening stimuli in anxi...
Previous research suggested that individuals with high trait anxiety have difficulties disengaging t...
Attentional biases for threat were investigated using a computerised version of the emotional Stroop...
The study was concerned with the effect of state anxiety (SA) and trait anxiety (TA) on parallel and...
In the presence of anxiety, threatening stimuli are allocated greater processing priority by high-tr...
The purpose of the present study was threefold: (a) to replicate the finding by MacLeod and Rutherfo...
The Stroop task is a well-known example of cognitive interference using conflicting stimuli that has...
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
Few studies have directly examined the relationship between trait anxiety and explicit memory for em...
Four experiments investigating the detailed nature of the attentional bias in anxiety are reported. ...
We investigated selective attention for masked and unmasked, threat, and positively valenced words, ...
Attentional biases for threat were examined in a non-clinical sample (N=60), with each participant t...
In the present study, we explored the proposition that an individual’s capacity for threat detection...
Two experiments evaluated differential predictions from two cognitive formulations of anxiety. Accor...
Several theories hypothesize an excessive allocation of attention toward threatening stimuli in anxi...
Previous research suggested that individuals with high trait anxiety have difficulties disengaging t...
Attentional biases for threat were investigated using a computerised version of the emotional Stroop...
The study was concerned with the effect of state anxiety (SA) and trait anxiety (TA) on parallel and...
In the presence of anxiety, threatening stimuli are allocated greater processing priority by high-tr...
The purpose of the present study was threefold: (a) to replicate the finding by MacLeod and Rutherfo...
The Stroop task is a well-known example of cognitive interference using conflicting stimuli that has...
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
Few studies have directly examined the relationship between trait anxiety and explicit memory for em...