Abstract

Recent research indicates that angry facial expressions are preferentially processed and may facilitate automatic avoidance response, especially in socially anxious individuals. However, few studies have examined whether this bias also expresses itself in more complex cognitive processes and behavior such as decision making. We recently introduced a variation of the Iowa Gambling Task which allowed us to document the influence of task-irrelevant emotional cues on rational decision making. The present study used a modified gambling task to investigate the impact of angry facial expressions on decision making in 38 individuals with a wide range of social anxiety. Participants were to find out which choices were (dis-) advantageous to maximize overall gain. To create a decision conflict between approach of reward and avoidance of fear-relevant angry faces, advantageous choices were associated with angry facial expressions, whereas disadvantageous choices were associated with happy facial expressions. Results indicated that higher social avoidance predicted less advantageous decisions in the beginning of the task, i.e., when contingencies were still uncertain. Interactions with specific skin conductance responses further clarified that this initial avoidance only occurred in combination with elevated responses before choosing an angry facial expressions. In addition, an interaction between high trait anxiety and elevated responses to early losses predicted faster learning of an advantageous strategy. These effects were independent of intelligence, general risky decision-making, self-reported state anxiety, and depression. Thus, socially avoidant individuals who respond emotionally to angry facial expressions are more likely to show avoidance of these faces under uncertainty. This novel laboratory paradigm may be an appropriate analog for central features of social anxiety.

Highlights

  • Avoidance is the characteristic action tendency associated with anxiety (Hofmann et al, 2009)

  • As we focused on simulating the approach–avoidance conflict in individuals with elevated levels of social anxiety, we only investigated the link between advantageous choices and angry faces

  • The present analyses focused on skin conductance responses (SCRs) during the first block of the gambling task in order to predict subsequent choices, because the impact of SCRs was expected to be strongest in initial trials

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Summary

Introduction

Avoidance is the characteristic action tendency associated with anxiety (Hofmann et al, 2009). Investigating avoidance by itself, only accounts for one side of a two-sided balance between avoidance and approach (Stein and Paulus, 2009) This broader view on avoidance takes into account that anxious individuals miss out on potential benefits and suffer costs. In social anxiety, these two tendencies are often in conflict with each other, because socially anxious individuals are explicitly aware of lost benefits, even for their most feared situations (Kashdan et al, 2008). Socially anxious individuals are often afraid of job interviews, they are aware of the potential benefits for their career They are in a conflict of opposing choices; to approach these benefits or avoid the situation to reduce anxiety. Studies investigating avoidance in the context of an approach–avoidance conflict in anxious individuals should, account for both fear-relevant as well as reward-related stimuli and consequences

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