Evidence of preattentive and attentional biases in anxiety is evaluated from a cognitive-motivational perspective. According to this analysis, vulnerability to anxiety stems mainly from a lower threshold for appraising threat, rather than a bias in the direction of attention deployment. Thus, relatively innocuous stimuli are evaluated as having higher subjective threat value by high than low trait anxious individuals, and it is further assumed that everyone orients to stimuli that are judged to be significantly threatening. This account is contrasted with other recent cognitive models of anxiety, and implications for the etiology, maintenance and treatment of anxiety disorders are discussed
AbstractTo our knowledge, at the moment there is no study to directly test the hypothesis of threate...
We investigated the attentional bias for threat in selected high and low trait-anxious participants ...
One major focus of anxiety research in recent years has been the identification of cognitive factors...
Two experiments evaluated differential predictions from two cognitive formulations of anxiety. Accor...
Research in experimental psychopathology and cognitive theories of anxiety highlight threat-related ...
Recently, researchers have investigated the causal nature of attentional bias for threat (AB) in the...
Threat-related attentional biases represent a basic survival mechanism. These biases include an enga...
Anxiety states are associated with increased attention to threat and a greater likelihood of reachin...
Anxiety disorders are prevalent throughout the lifespan and are associated with a number of negative...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2000 Dr. Simon G. KennedyIn order to clarify the relation...
© 2017, © The Author(s) 2017.Anxiety vulnerability is associated with an attentional bias to threat....
The effect of threatening cues and anxiety upon attention within a Posner paradigm was investigated ...
Attention is guided by both endogenous cues, such as expectations stemming from memories, and by exo...
Research suggests that anxiety is maintained by an attentional bias to threat, and a growing base of...
This study examined the role of self-reported attentional control in regulating attentional biases r...
AbstractTo our knowledge, at the moment there is no study to directly test the hypothesis of threate...
We investigated the attentional bias for threat in selected high and low trait-anxious participants ...
One major focus of anxiety research in recent years has been the identification of cognitive factors...
Two experiments evaluated differential predictions from two cognitive formulations of anxiety. Accor...
Research in experimental psychopathology and cognitive theories of anxiety highlight threat-related ...
Recently, researchers have investigated the causal nature of attentional bias for threat (AB) in the...
Threat-related attentional biases represent a basic survival mechanism. These biases include an enga...
Anxiety states are associated with increased attention to threat and a greater likelihood of reachin...
Anxiety disorders are prevalent throughout the lifespan and are associated with a number of negative...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2000 Dr. Simon G. KennedyIn order to clarify the relation...
© 2017, © The Author(s) 2017.Anxiety vulnerability is associated with an attentional bias to threat....
The effect of threatening cues and anxiety upon attention within a Posner paradigm was investigated ...
Attention is guided by both endogenous cues, such as expectations stemming from memories, and by exo...
Research suggests that anxiety is maintained by an attentional bias to threat, and a growing base of...
This study examined the role of self-reported attentional control in regulating attentional biases r...
AbstractTo our knowledge, at the moment there is no study to directly test the hypothesis of threate...
We investigated the attentional bias for threat in selected high and low trait-anxious participants ...
One major focus of anxiety research in recent years has been the identification of cognitive factors...