Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking

Social anxiety disorder is maintained by biased attentional processing, which may encompass biases in the component engagement, disengagement, and avoidance attentional processes. However, few studies have directly examined whether such biases occur during social-evaluative conditions characteristic...

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Main Authors: Chen, N., Clarke, Patrick, MacLeod, C., Hicke, I., Guastella, A.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Textrum Ltd 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42180
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author Chen, N.
Clarke, Patrick
MacLeod, C.
Hicke, I.
Guastella, A.
author_facet Chen, N.
Clarke, Patrick
MacLeod, C.
Hicke, I.
Guastella, A.
author_sort Chen, N.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Social anxiety disorder is maintained by biased attentional processing, which may encompass biases in the component engagement, disengagement, and avoidance attentional processes. However, few studies have directly examined whether such biases occur during social-evaluative conditions characteristically feared in social anxiety. The current study presents a novel approach for the assessment of attentional bias. Clinically socially anxious (n = 27) and control (n = 29) participants were required to give a speech in front of a pre-recorded audience displaying emotional social gestures while eye movement was recorded. Socially anxious individuals avoided attending to positive and threatening stimuli. At the onset of an emotional gesture, control participants were additionally faster to orient towards positive, relative to threatening gestures, while this bias was absent in socially anxious participants. The findings suggest that during conditions of social-evaluative stress, social anxiety is characterized by the attentional avoidance of emotional stimuli, and the absence of an engagement bias favouring positive stimuli.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:10:47Z
publishDate 2016
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-421802017-09-13T14:20:53Z Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking Chen, N. Clarke, Patrick MacLeod, C. Hicke, I. Guastella, A. Social anxiety disorder is maintained by biased attentional processing, which may encompass biases in the component engagement, disengagement, and avoidance attentional processes. However, few studies have directly examined whether such biases occur during social-evaluative conditions characteristically feared in social anxiety. The current study presents a novel approach for the assessment of attentional bias. Clinically socially anxious (n = 27) and control (n = 29) participants were required to give a speech in front of a pre-recorded audience displaying emotional social gestures while eye movement was recorded. Socially anxious individuals avoided attending to positive and threatening stimuli. At the onset of an emotional gesture, control participants were additionally faster to orient towards positive, relative to threatening gestures, while this bias was absent in socially anxious participants. The findings suggest that during conditions of social-evaluative stress, social anxiety is characterized by the attentional avoidance of emotional stimuli, and the absence of an engagement bias favouring positive stimuli. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42180 10.5127/jep.040313 Textrum Ltd restricted
spellingShingle Chen, N.
Clarke, Patrick
MacLeod, C.
Hicke, I.
Guastella, A.
Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking
title Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking
title_full Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking
title_fullStr Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking
title_full_unstemmed Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking
title_short Aberrant Gaze Patterns in Social Anxiety Disorder: An Eye Movement Assessment during Public Speaking
title_sort aberrant gaze patterns in social anxiety disorder: an eye movement assessment during public speaking
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42180