Focusing on fear: Attentional disengagement from emotional faces.
Evidence suggests that anxiety is associated with a shift of visual attention toward threatening stimuli in the environment, such as facial expressions (Mogg and Bradley, 1999). More recent evidence, however, indicates that anxiety may be better characterized by a failure to rapidly disengage the vi...
Main Authors: | Georgiou, G, Bleakley, C, Hayward, J, Russo, R, Dutton, K, Eltiti, S, Fox, E |
---|---|
Format: | Journal article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2005
|
Similar Items
-
Attentional Bias for Threat: Evidence for Delayed Disengagement from Emotional Faces.
by: Fox, E, et al.
Published: (2002) -
Anxiety modulates the degree of attentive resources required to process emotional faces.
by: Fox, E, et al.
Published: (2005) -
The face of fear: Effects of eye gaze and emotion on visual attention.
by: Mathews, A, et al.
Published: (2003) -
Facial Expressions of Emotion: Are Angry Faces Detected More Efficiently?
by: Fox, E, et al.
Published: (2000) -
Does emotion processing require attention? The effects of fear conditioning and perceptual load.
by: Yates, A, et al.
Published: (2010)