Four experiments investigating the detailed nature of the attentional bias in anxiety are reported. Previous research using the Stroop task has shown that, when compared with non-patient controls, anxious patients are relatively slower at colour naming threat-related words than non-threat words. Experiments One and Two investigated whether this apparent attentional bias is a function of anxiety per se and/or is related to patient/non-patient status. Experiment One compared colour-naming times for threat and non-threat words in low, medium and high trait anxiety normal subjects. High anxiety was not associated with slower colour-naming times for threat words. Experiment Two compared generalized anxiety disorder patients with equally anxious ...
Attention for threatening information was investigated using a computerised version of the emotional...
Attentional biases for threat were examined in a non-clinical sample (N=60), with each participant t...
Attentional biases for threat were investigated using a computerised version of the emotional Stroop...
There has been considerable recent interest in identifying which specific processes characterize the...
Hypothesized that repressors (Ss high in defensiveness with low trait anxiety) would show cognitive ...
We investigated selective attention for masked and unmasked, threat, and positively valenced words, ...
For the first time, anxiety-related attentional bias was examined by considering separately its time...
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
One major focus of anxiety research in recent years has been the identification of cognitive factors...
We investigated the attentional bias for threat in selected high and low trait-anxious participants ...
This study examined the role of self-reported attentional control in regulating attentional biases r...
Summary-Interference effects on threat words in anxious subjects on the emotional Stroop task have g...
Previous research using attentional search tasks has revealed an anxiety-related bias favouring atte...
Research suggests that anxiety is maintained by an attentional bias to threat, and a growing base of...
It is generally held that anxiety is characterized by an attentional bias for threatening informatio...
Attention for threatening information was investigated using a computerised version of the emotional...
Attentional biases for threat were examined in a non-clinical sample (N=60), with each participant t...
Attentional biases for threat were investigated using a computerised version of the emotional Stroop...
There has been considerable recent interest in identifying which specific processes characterize the...
Hypothesized that repressors (Ss high in defensiveness with low trait anxiety) would show cognitive ...
We investigated selective attention for masked and unmasked, threat, and positively valenced words, ...
For the first time, anxiety-related attentional bias was examined by considering separately its time...
It has been reported that anxious subjects attend selectively to threat information, and especially ...
One major focus of anxiety research in recent years has been the identification of cognitive factors...
We investigated the attentional bias for threat in selected high and low trait-anxious participants ...
This study examined the role of self-reported attentional control in regulating attentional biases r...
Summary-Interference effects on threat words in anxious subjects on the emotional Stroop task have g...
Previous research using attentional search tasks has revealed an anxiety-related bias favouring atte...
Research suggests that anxiety is maintained by an attentional bias to threat, and a growing base of...
It is generally held that anxiety is characterized by an attentional bias for threatening informatio...
Attention for threatening information was investigated using a computerised version of the emotional...
Attentional biases for threat were examined in a non-clinical sample (N=60), with each participant t...
Attentional biases for threat were investigated using a computerised version of the emotional Stroop...