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Content specificity of attentional bias to threat in post-traumatic stress disorder

Author Affiliations
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, University of Queensland, North South University, ...
Published InJournal of Anxiety Disorders
Year2017
Citations40

Abstract

Background Attentional bias to affective information and reduced cognitive control may maintain the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and impair cognitive functioning. However, the role of content specificity of affective stimuli (e.g., trauma-related, emotional trauma-unrelated) in the observed attentional bias and cognitive control is less clear, as this has not been tested simultaneously before. Therefore, we examined the content specificity of attentional bias to threat in PTSD. Methods PTSD participants (survivors of a multistory factory collapse, n=30) and matched controls (n=30) performed an Eriksen Flanker task. They identified the direction of a centrally presented target arrow, which was flanked by several task-irrelevant distractor arrows pointed to the same (congruent) or opposite direction (incongruent). Additionally, participants were presented with a…
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