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Anxiety modulates the degree of attentive resources required to process emotional faces.

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TLDR
Individual differences in self-reported anxiety are an important determinant of the attentional control of emotional processing and support the proposals that emotion perception is not fully automatic and that anxiety is related to a reduced ability to inhibit the processing of threat-related stimuli.
Abstract
The present study contributes to the ongoing debate over the extent to which attentive resources are required for emotion perception. Although fearful facial expressions are strong competitors for attention, we predict that the magnitude of this effect may be modulated by anxiety. To test this hypothesis, healthy volunteers who varied in their self-reported levels of trait and state anxiety underwent an attentional blink task. Both fearful and happy facial expressions were subject to a strong attentional blink effect for low-anxious individuals. For those reporting high anxiety, a blink occurred for both fearful and happy facial expressions, but the magnitude of the attentional blink was significantly reduced for the fearful expressions. This supports the proposals that emotion perception is not fully automatic and that anxiety is related to a reduced ability to inhibit the processing of threat-related stimuli. Thus, individual differences in self-reported anxiety are an important determinant of the attentional control of emotional processing.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Anxiety and cognitive performance: Attentional control theory.

TL;DR: Attentional control theory is an approach to anxiety and cognition representing a major development of Eysenck and Calvo's (1992) processing efficiency theory and may not impair performance effectiveness when it leads to the use of compensatory strategies (e.g., enhanced effort; increased use of processing resources).
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of emotion on attention: A review of attentional processing of emotional information

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider evidence from cognitive experimental investigations of attentional processing of emotional information and contrast findings from the general population with those from populations selected for clinical disorder or vulnerability to it.

INVITED REVIEW The effects of emotion on attention: A review of attentional processing of emotional information

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider evidence from cognitive experimental investigations of attentional processing of emotional information and contrast findings from the general population with those from populations selected for clinical disorder or vulnerability to it.
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A review of current evidence for the causal impact of attentional bias on fear and anxiety

TL;DR: There is evidence in favor of causality, yet a strict unidirectional cause-effect model is unlikely to hold, and the relation between attentional bias and fear and anxiety is best described as a bidirectional, maintaining, or mutually reinforcing relation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical abuse amplifies attention to threat and increases anxiety in children.

TL;DR: Findings indicate that extreme emotional experiences may promote vulnerability for anxiety by influencing the development of attention regulation abilities.
References
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Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory

TL;DR: The STAI as mentioned in this paper is an indicator of two types of anxiety, the state and trait anxiety, and measure the severity of the overall anxiety level, which is appropriate for those who have at least a sixth grade reading level.

Pictures of Facial Affect

Paul Ekman
Journal ArticleDOI

Temporary suppression of visual processing in an RSVP task: an attentional blink? .

TL;DR: The authors found that the presentation of stimuli after the target but before target-identification processes are complete produces interference at a letter recognition stage, which may cause the temporary suppression of visual attention mechanisms observed in the present study.
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The Emotional Stroop Task and Psychopathology

TL;DR: The authors review research showing that patients are often slower to name the color of a word associated with concerns relevant to their clinical condition and address the causes and mechanisms underlying the phenomenon, focusing on J.L. McClelland's parallel distributed processing model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Masked Presentations of Emotional Facial Expressions Modulate Amygdala Activity without Explicit Knowledge

TL;DR: This study, using fMRI in conjunction with masked stimulus presentations, represents an initial step toward determining the role of the amygdala in nonconscious processing.
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