Results 211 to 220 of about 15,061 (234)
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Attending to emotional expressions: no evidence for automatic capture in the dot-probe task

Cognition and Emotion, 2017
Research on automatic attention to emotional faces offers mixed results. Therefore we examined validity effects for facial expressions of different emotions (compared to neutral faces) with a dot-probe paradigm in seven studies (total N = 308). Systematic variations of type of emotion, CTI, task, cue size, and masking allow for a differentiated ...
Swantje, Puls, Klaus, Rothermund
openaire   +2 more sources

Attentional bias for valenced stimuli as a function of personality in the dot-probe task

Journal of Research in Personality, 2004
Extroversion (E) and neuroticism (N) are associated with positive and negative affect, respectively. This correspondence between each dimension of personality with each dimension of affect may reflect a common mechanism, such as attentional bias to emotional stimuli.
Zenab Amin   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Dot Probe Tasks Produce No Attentional Modifications Towards Healthy Weight Bodies

European Eating Disorders Review
ABSTRACT Objective Using the dot‐probe paradigm, previous research has demonstrated that women on average show attentional biases towards underweight bodies. However, little research has used these paradigms to examine the malleability of such biases.
A. Treshi‐Marie Perera   +2 more
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Different Stages in Attentional Processing of Facial Expressions of Pain: A Dot-Probe Task Modification

The Journal of Pain, 2013
The way in which individuals attend to pain-related stimuli is thought to affect their pain experience. Early and late stages of processing, with shifts from attentional engagement to disengagement (avoidance), have been identified, but rarely investigated in the same protocol.
Lautenbacher, Stefan   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Attentional bias in MDD: ERP components analysis and classification using a dot-probe task

Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine, 2018
Strands of evidence have supported existence of negative attentional bias in patients with depression. This study aimed to assess the behavioral and electrophysiological signatures of attentional bias in major depressive disorder (MDD) and explore whether ERP components contain valuable information for discriminating between MDD patients and healthy ...
Xiaowei Li 0005   +10 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Beyond the modified dot-probe task

Clinical Psychology Review
Attention biases towards disease-relevant cues have been implicated in numerous disorders and health conditions, such as anxiety, cancer, drug-use disorders, and chronic pain. Attention bias modification (ABM) has shown that changing attention biases can change related emotional processes.
Rooney, Tessa   +6 more
openaire   +1 more source

Event‐related potentials of attentional bias toward faces in the dot‐probe task: A systematic review

Psychophysiology, 2017
AbstractThe dot‐probe task is a common task to assess attentional bias toward different stimuli and how groups differ (e.g., attentional bias in anxiety disorders). However, measuring reaction time has been suggested to be unreliable. Neuroimaging methods such as fMRI were shown to be more reliable in assessing attentional bias, but fMRI has poor ...
Robert D, Torrence, Lucy J, Troup
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Lack of Attentional Bias for Emotional Information in Clinically Depressed Children and Adolescents on the Dot Probe Task

Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 2000
The present study utilised a cognitive paradigm to investigate attentional biases in clinically depressed children and adolescents. Two groups of children and adolescents—clinically depressed ( N = 19) and normal controls ( N = 26)—were asked to ...
Neshat-Doost, H T   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Neural Generators of the N2 Component for Abstinent Heroin Addicts in a Dot-Probe Task

2018
Target-elicited N2 component of event-related potential (ERP) has been considered to be involved in target detection in the attentional processes. We aim to link the target-elicited N2 in a dot-probe task and the drug-related attention bias in heroin dependence and further estimate the brain regions involved in the generation of the target-elicited N2.
Hongqian Li   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

An ERP Study of Attentional Bias to Drug Cues in Heroin Dependence by Using Dot-Probe Task

2016
Electroencephalogram EEG contains a wealth of information of the brain cognitive activities. Previous studies have provided that the behavioral data of reaction time RT is the main evidence of the attentional bias AB to drug cues in the heroin dependence. It is the primary method of measuring AB among the addicts.
Zhijie Wei   +6 more
openaire   +1 more source

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