Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children

Attentional biases, consisting of a preferential processing of threatening stimuli, have been found in anxious adults as predicted by several cognitive models. However, studies with non-clinical samples of children have provided mixed results. therefore, the aim of this research was to determine th...

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Main Authors: Jeniffer Ortega Marín, Karim Jiménez Solanilla, Rocio Acosta Barreto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de San Buenaventura 2015-01-01
Series:International Journal of Psychological Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/646/446
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spelling doaj-027cebd2c87a4ea5916c4cf36608b1922020-11-24T20:56:53ZengUniversidad de San BuenaventuraInternational Journal of Psychological Research2011-20842011-79222015-01-01817590 Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school childrenJeniffer Ortega Marín 0Karim Jiménez Solanilla1Rocio Acosta Barreto2Universidad de San BuenaventuraUniversidad de San BuenaventuraUniversidad de San BuenaventuraAttentional biases, consisting of a preferential processing of threatening stimuli, have been found in anxious adults as predicted by several cognitive models. However, studies with non-clinical samples of children have provided mixed results. therefore, the aim of this research was to determine the effects of state and trait anxiety on the selective attention towards threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children (age: 8 to 13, n = 110) using the dot-probe task. This study did not reveal an effect of trait anxiety on selective attention towards threatening stimuli. However, a significant difference was found between participants with low state anxiety and high state anxiety. Nevertheless, the effect size was small. Specifically, participants with low state anxiety showed a bias towards threatening stimuli. Overall, the findings of this research with a non-clinical sample of school children suggest that attentional biases towards threatening information, which has been repeatedly found in anxious adults, are not necessarily inherent to non-clinical anxiety in children and on the other hand, the relationship between attentional biases and anxiety in this population might be moderated by other cognitive processes. http://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/646/446attentional biasdotprobe tasktrait anxietystate anxietynon-clinical sampleschoolchildren.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeniffer Ortega Marín
Karim Jiménez Solanilla
Rocio Acosta Barreto
spellingShingle Jeniffer Ortega Marín
Karim Jiménez Solanilla
Rocio Acosta Barreto
Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children
International Journal of Psychological Research
attentional bias
dotprobe task
trait anxiety
state anxiety
non-clinical sample
schoolchildren.
author_facet Jeniffer Ortega Marín
Karim Jiménez Solanilla
Rocio Acosta Barreto
author_sort Jeniffer Ortega Marín
title Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children
title_short Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children
title_full Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children
title_fullStr Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children
title_full_unstemmed Effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children
title_sort effects of state and trait anxiety on selective attention to threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children
publisher Universidad de San Buenaventura
series International Journal of Psychological Research
issn 2011-2084
2011-7922
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Attentional biases, consisting of a preferential processing of threatening stimuli, have been found in anxious adults as predicted by several cognitive models. However, studies with non-clinical samples of children have provided mixed results. therefore, the aim of this research was to determine the effects of state and trait anxiety on the selective attention towards threatening stimuli in a non-clinical sample of school children (age: 8 to 13, n = 110) using the dot-probe task. This study did not reveal an effect of trait anxiety on selective attention towards threatening stimuli. However, a significant difference was found between participants with low state anxiety and high state anxiety. Nevertheless, the effect size was small. Specifically, participants with low state anxiety showed a bias towards threatening stimuli. Overall, the findings of this research with a non-clinical sample of school children suggest that attentional biases towards threatening information, which has been repeatedly found in anxious adults, are not necessarily inherent to non-clinical anxiety in children and on the other hand, the relationship between attentional biases and anxiety in this population might be moderated by other cognitive processes.
topic attentional bias
dotprobe task
trait anxiety
state anxiety
non-clinical sample
schoolchildren.
url http://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/646/446
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