Abstract

Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a psychiatric condition that often onsets in childhood. Cognitive models underline the role of attention in the maintenance of SAD, but studies on youth populations are few, particularly those using eye tracking to measure attention. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for SAD includes interventions targeting attention, like exposure to eye contact, but the link between CBT and attention bias is largely unexplored. This study investigated attention bias in youth with SAD and the association with outcome from CBT. Latency to attend to pictures of faces with different emotions (vigilance) and latency to disengage from social stimuli (avoidance) was examined in N = 25 adolescents (aged 13-17) with SAD in relation to treatment outcome. Vigilance was operationalized as the time it took to relocate the gaze from a central position to a peripherally appearing social stimulus. The latency to disengage from a centrally located social stimulus, when a non-social stimulus appeared in the periphery, was used as a proxy for avoidance. Attention characteristics in the SAD group were compared to non-anxious (NA) controls (N = 22). Visual attention was measured using eye tracking. Participants in both the SAD and NA groups were vigilant towards angry faces, compared to neutral and happy faces. Similarly, both groups disengaged attention faster from angry faces. Adolescents with SAD who disengaged faster from social stimuli had less social anxiety after CBT. The results indicate that anxious youth display a vigilant-avoidant attention pattern to threat. However, partly inconsistent with previous research, the same pattern was observed in the NA group.

Highlights

  • Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is one of the most common anxiety disorders with a lifetime prevalence of approximately 12% [1]

  • Preliminary analyses revealed no statistical differences between the groups with regard to number of successfully recorded trials, and within the SAD group there was no effect of time on number of successful trials

  • The purpose of this study was to compare visual attention patterns in adolescents with SAD, with a non-anxious group, as well as to explore the associations between attention biases and Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Results demonstrated that both the SAD and the NA groups were more vigilant towards angry faces compared to neutral and happy faces, indicated by a tendency for both groups to attend faster to appearing social threats

Read more

Summary

Objectives

1) if adolescents with SAD are more vigilant towards socially threatening stimuli compared to non-anxious controls, and 2) if adolescents with SAD are quicker to disengage when presented with socially threatening stimuli, compared to non-anxious controls. The purpose of this study was to compare visual attention patterns in adolescents with SAD, with a non-anxious group, as well as to explore the associations between attention biases and CBT

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call