Abstract

It is generally thought to be adaptive that fear relevant stimuli in the environment can capture and hold our attention; and in psychopathology attentional allocation is thought to be cue-specific. Such hypervigilance toward threatening cues or difficulty to disengage attention from threat has been demonstrated for a variety of stimuli, for example, toward evolutionary prepared animals or toward socially relevant facial expressions. Usually, specific stimuli have been examined in individuals with particular fears (e.g., animals in animal fearful and faces in socially fearful participants). However, different kinds of stimuli are rarely examined in one study. Thus, it is unknown how different categories of threatening stimuli compete for attention and how specific kinds of fears modulate these attentional processes. In this study, we used a free viewing paradigm: pairs of pictures with threat-related content (spiders or angry faces) or neutral content (butterflies or neutral faces) were presented side by side (i.e., spiders and angry faces, angry and neutral faces, spiders and butterflies, butterflies and neutral faces). Eye-movements were recorded while spider fearful, socially anxious, or non-anxious participants viewed the picture pairs. Results generally replicate the finding that unpleasant pictures more effectively capture attention in the beginning of a trial compared to neutral pictures. This effect was more pronounced in spider fearful participants: the higher the fear the quicker they were in looking at spiders. This was not the case for high socially anxious participants and pictures of angry faces. Interestingly, when presented next to each other, there was no preference in initial orientation for either spiders or angry faces. However, neutral faces were looked at more quickly than butterflies. Regarding sustained attention, we found no general preference for unpleasant pictures compared to neutral pictures.

Highlights

  • Humans are exposed to a plethora of concurrent visual stimuli and attention is preferentially directed to the most menacing of them

  • Attentional biases are generally thought to be specific for particular fears: For example, specific phobias are related to pictures of the feared animals, social anxiety is related to negative emotional facial expressions (Cisler and Koster, 2010)

  • Based on the findings reported above, spiders, and angry faces were not expected to differ in initial orienting of attention when pitted against each other but faces were expected to sustain attention longer compared to animal stimuli for all participants independent from specific fear

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Summary

Introduction

Humans are exposed to a plethora of concurrent visual stimuli and attention is preferentially directed to the most menacing of them. This is thought to be adaptive because quick detection of danger promotes survival by initiating necessary behavioral responses (Öhman et al, 2001). Compelling evidence indicates that fear-related animals are preferentially processed (Macleod and Mathews, 1988), which manifests itself in eye-tracking research as longer fixation durations or as greater skin conductance responses compared to neutral stimuli (Gerdes et al, 2008, 2009a; Wiemer et al, 2013). The stimuli used in such studies are typically very diverse, e.g., potentially threatening animals like snakes, spiders, insects (Lipp, 2006; Rinck and Becker, 2006; Gerdes et al, 2008, 2009b; Weymar et al, 2013; Berdica et al, 2014, 2017)

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