Abstract

There is evidence that people with social anxiety show abnormal processing of emotional faces. To investigate the impact of top-down prediction on emotional face processing in social anxiety, brain responses of participants with high and low social anxiety (LSA) were recorded, while they performed a variation of the emotional task, using high temporal resolution event-related potential techniques. Behaviorally, we reported an effect of prediction with higher accuracy for predictable than unpredictable faces. Furthermore, we found that participants with high social anxiety (HSA), but not with LSA, recognized angry faces more accurately than happy faces. For the P100 and P200 components, HSA participants showed enhanced brain activity for angry faces compared to happy faces, suggesting a hypervigilance to angry faces. Importantly, HSA participants exhibited larger N170 amplitudes in the right hemisphere electrodes than LSA participants when they observed unpredictable angry faces, but not when the angry faces were predictable. This probably reflects the top-down prediction improving the deficiency at building a holistic face representation in HSA participants.

Highlights

  • Social anxiety disorder (SAD), known as social phobia (SP), is characterized by a severe impairment of social interactions (Ruscio et al, 2008; Harbort et al, 2013)

  • There was a significant interaction between emotion and group [F(1,28) = 6.13, p = 0.020, η2p = 0.18], which showed that the accuracy for angry faces was significantly higher than that for happy faces in high social anxiety (HSA)

  • Follow-up analyses confirmed that HSA participants exhibited larger N170 amplitudes in the right hemisphere electrodes than low social anxiety (LSA) participants when they perceived unpredictable (p = 0.046), but not predictable (p = 0.163), angry faces (Figures 3, 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Social anxiety disorder (SAD), known as social phobia (SP), is characterized by a severe impairment of social interactions (Ruscio et al, 2008; Harbort et al, 2013). Emotional faces convey important information in social interactions (Luo et al, 2010; Ran et al, 2014a). An increasing number of electrophysiological studies have investigated the time course of emotional face processing in social anxiety. It has been shown that, in individuals with SAD, there is a significant increase in the P100 amplitude in response to threat/angry faces (Mueller et al, 2009). Peschard et al (2013) reported that people with SAD demonstrated enhancement of the P100 amplitude for all, not just social, stimuli

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