Abstract

Healthy individuals display a tendency to allocate attention unequally across space, and this bias has implications for how individuals interact with their environments. However, the origins of this phenomenon remain relatively poorly understood. The present research examined the joint and independent contributions of two fundamental motivational systems – behavioural approach and inhibition systems (BAS and BIS) – to lateral spatial bias in a locomotion task. Participants completed self-report measures of trait BAS and BIS, then repeatedly traversed a room, blindfolded, aiming for a straight line. We obtained locomotion data from motion tracking to capture variations in the walking trajectories. Overall, walking trajectories deviated to the left, and this tendency was more pronounced with increasing BIS scores. Meanwhile, BAS was associated with relative rightward tendencies when BIS was low, but not when BIS was high. These results demonstrate for the first time an association between BIS and lateral spatial bias independently of variations in BAS. The findings also contribute to clarify the circumstances in which BAS is associated with a rightward bias. We discuss the implications of these findings for the neurobiological underpinnings of BIS and for the literature on spatial bias.

Highlights

  • Our aim was to see if differences in behavioural inhibition system (BIS) and behavioural approach system (BAS) relate to differences in the shape, or more precisely the slope of the trajectories (k = 1555)

  • We carried out further analyses probing the simple effects of BAS at high (+1SD) and low (À1SD) levels of BIS. These analyses showed that BAS was only associated with rightward tendencies when combined with low levels of BIS, B5 = .38, SE = .14, p = .008, 95% CI [.10, .66], but not when combined with high levels of BIS, B5 = À.09, SE = .20, p = .650, 95% CI [À.48, .30]

  • We examined the combination of extremely high levels of BAS (x + 2.5SD) and low levels of BIS (x À 1SD), which yields a straight trajectory, B1 = À.00, p = .997, 95% CI [À.87, .87]

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Summary

Introduction

Striving for outcomes that benefit the organism, and being vigilant for threats, are two fundamental survival strategies in many species (Wilson, Coleman, Clark, & Biederman, 1993). The behavioural approach system (BAS; Gray, 1972) and the behavioural inhibition system (BIS; Gray, 1975, 1990) are two analogous regulatory mechanisms that are manifested in affective, cognitive, and behavioural traits (Carver & White, 1994; Fowles, 1980). Activation of BAS is linked to the experience of positive affect and goal-directed behaviour. Activation of BIS is linked to the experience of anxiety, increased sensitivity to threatening cues, and disruption of ongoing processes. The aim of the present research is to probe the independent and joint associations of these motivational orientations with spatial attention

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