Interpretive bias in social phobia: An ERP study with morphed emotional schematic faces
نویسندگان
چکیده
Individuals with social phobia fear negative evaluation, which is most directly signalled by an angry expression of the interlocutor's face. This study investigated the processing of 3 series of schematic emotional faces, which were morphed in 7 steps from a neutral face to an angry, happy, or sad face by systematically varying features of the mouth, eyes, and eyebrows. Individuals with social phobia or spider phobia rated angry faces as more arousing than controls. Social phobics did not identify angry faces faster and showed no greater latent trait to identify a face as angry than controls. ERP data showed a modulation of the face-specific Nl70 by facial emotion, although this did not discriminate social phobics from controls. Instead, phobic subjects exhibited generally increased visual PI amplitudes, suggesting a state of hypervigilance for incoming stimuli. Results are discussed in the context of psychophysiological abnormalities in the anxiety disorder spectrum.
منابع مشابه
Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia
Social phobia has been associated with an attentional bias for angry faces. This study aimed at further characterising this attentional bias by investigating reaction times, heart rates, and ERPs while social phobics, spider phobics, and controls identified either the colour or the emotional quality of angry, happy, or neutral schematic faces. The emotional expression of angry faces did not int...
متن کاملBehavioral and Brain Functions
Background: Individuals with social phobia are more likely to misinterpret ambiguous social situations as more threatening, i.e. they show an interpretive bias. This study investigated whether such a bias also exists in specific phobia. Methods: Individuals with spider phobia or social phobia, spider aficionados and non-phobic controls saw morphed stimuli that gradually transformed from a schem...
متن کاملEvent-related potentials related to normal and morphed emotional faces.
S. Bentin and L. Y. Deouell (2000) have suggested that face recognition is achieved through a special-purpose neural mechanism, and its existence can be identified by a specific event-related potential (ERP) correlate, the N170 effect. In the present study, the authors explored the structural significance of N170 by comparing normal vs. morphed stimuli. They used a morphing procedure that allow...
متن کاملتاثیر پردازش کلی چهره ای بر سو گیری توجه نسبت به چهره های هیجانی در کودکان مضطرب
This study was performed to examine the effect of holistic face processing and trait anxiety on children’s attentional biases toward schematic natural and jumbled emotional faces (angry, happy, neutral). The participants were entered into study considering their scores in Trait anxiety inventory for children (Spielberger, 1973) and the results of a semi-structured interview. 30 high-and 30 low ...
متن کاملInterpretative bias in spider phobia: Perception and information processing of ambiguous schematic stimuli.
This study investigates the interpretative bias in spider phobia with respect to rapid visuomotor processing. We compared perception, evaluation, and visuomotor processing of ambiguous schematic stimuli between spider-fearful and control participants. Stimuli were produced by gradually morphing schematic flowers into spiders. Participants rated these stimuli related to their perceptual appearan...
متن کامل