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Κυριακή 20 Δεκεμβρίου 2015

Distractibility as a Precursor to Anxiety: Preexisting Attentional Control Deficits Predict Subsequent Autonomic Arousal During Anxiety

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Publication date: Available online 19 December 2015
Source:Biological Psychology
Author(s): Jeffrey L. Birk, Philipp C. Opitz, Heather L. Urry
Low attentional control (AC) and high anxiety are closely linked. Researchers often presume that high anxiety reduces AC; however, the reverse causal possibility – that low AC increases anxiety – is equally plausible. We addressed this question in people with elevated trait anxiety by evaluating the temporal precedence of the AC-anxiety association. We tested whether autonomic arousal (electrodermal activity) and subjective anxiety elicited by an anxiety induction were associated more strongly with AC measured either pre-induction (N = 40) or post-induction (N = 38). Low AC was indexed by distractibility during a visual search task requiring attentional inhibition of emotionally neutral distractors. Higher distractibility predicted higher autonomic activation but not higher increases in self-reported anxiety. Critically, this AC-anxiety association occurred for pre-induction but not post-induction AC. The results suggest that low AC may heighten subsequent anxious arousal. By implication, treatment interventions should specifically enhance AC to alleviate anxiety.



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