Title of article
Impaired identification of fearful faces in Generalised Social Phobia
Author/Authors
Garner، نويسنده , , Matthew and Baldwin، نويسنده , , David S. and Bradley، نويسنده , , Brendan P. and Mogg، نويسنده , , Karin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
6
From page
460
To page
465
Abstract
Background
ive models and interventions for anxiety assume that socially anxious individuals interpret ambiguous social information in a threatening manner. However, experimental evidence for this hypothesised cognitive bias is mixed. The present study is novel in using a signal detection approach to clarify whether Generalised Social Phobia (GSP) is associated with biased identification of emotionally ambiguous facial expressions.
s
ients with GSP and 17 non-anxious volunteers classified ambiguous emotional facial expressions, with each face reflecting a blend of two emotions: angry–happy, fearful–happy and fearful–angry. Discrimination accuracy and response criterion were assessed.
s
ts with GSP showed significantly poorer discrimination of ambiguous emotional facial expressions that contained an element of fear (i.e., fearful–happy and fearful–angry expressions), compared to non-anxious controls. The groups did not significantly differ in discrimination of faces which lacked fear content (i.e., angry–happy blend), or on measures of response criterion.
tions
sample size, coexisting depressive symptoms.
sions
gs indicate a selective impairment in fear identification in GSP. Results are discussed with reference to neurocognitive models of anxiety, and research on serotonergic modulation of emotional face processing.
Keywords
Social phobia , Anxiety , Face processing , Cognitive bias , Emotional expressions
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number
1431776
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