» Articles » PMID: 15476691

Experience-dependent Plasticity for Attention to Threat: Behavioral and Neurophysiological Evidence in Humans

Overview
Journal Biol Psychiatry
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2004 Oct 13
PMID 15476691
Citations 16
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Biased attention to threat represents a key feature of anxiety disorders. This bias is altered by therapeutic or stressful experiences, suggesting that the bias is plastic. Charting on-line behavioral and neurophysiological changes in attention bias may generate insights on the nature of such plasticity. We used an attention-orientation task with threat cues to examine how healthy individuals alter their response over time to such cues. In Experiments 1 through 3, we established that healthy individuals demonstrate an increased attention bias away from threat over time. For Experiment 3, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to determine the neural bases for this phenomenon. Gradually increasing attention bias away from threat is associated with increased activation in the occipitotemporal cortex. Examination of plasticity of attention bias with individuals at risk for anxiety disorders may reveal how threatening stimuli come to be categorized differently in this population over time.

Citing Articles

Pre-scan state anxiety is associated with greater right amygdala-hippocampal response to fearful versus happy faces among trait-anxious Latina girls.

Diaz D, Tseng W, Michalska K BMC Psychiatry. 2024; 24(1):1.

PMID: 38167015 PMC: 10759434. DOI: 10.1186/s12888-023-05403-6.


Sex Differences in Anxiety: An Investigation of the Moderating Role of Sex in Performance Monitoring and Attentional Bias to Threat in High Trait Anxious Individuals.

Strand N, Fang L, Carlson J Front Hum Neurosci. 2021; 15:627589.

PMID: 34093149 PMC: 8172782. DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2021.627589.


Child maltreatment, callous-unemotional traits, and defensive responding in high-risk children: An investigation of emotion-modulated startle response.

Dackis M, Rogosch F, Cicchetti D Dev Psychopathol. 2015; 27(4 Pt 2):1527-45.

PMID: 26535942 PMC: 4636040. DOI: 10.1017/S0954579415000929.


Predicting treatment response in social anxiety disorder from functional magnetic resonance imaging.

Doehrmann O, Ghosh S, Polli F, Reynolds G, Horn F, Keshavan A JAMA Psychiatry. 2012; 70(1):87-97.

PMID: 22945462 PMC: 3844518. DOI: 10.1001/2013.jamapsychiatry.5.


Attention training and the threat bias: an ERP study.

OToole L, Dennis T Brain Cogn. 2011; 78(1):63-73.

PMID: 22083026 PMC: 3233611. DOI: 10.1016/j.bandc.2011.10.007.