Selective Processing Biases in Anxiety-sensitive Men and Women
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Cognition and Emotion
- Vol. 12 (1) , 105-134
- https://doi.org/10.1080/026999398379808
Abstract
Two studies were designed to establish whether high anxiety sensitive (AS) university students selectively process threat cues pertaining to their feared catastrophic consequences of anxiety, and to examine potential gender differences in the selective processing of such threat cues among high versus low AS subjects. Forty students (20 M; 20 F) participated in Study 1. Half were high AS and half low AS, according to scores on the Anxiety Sensitivity Index (ASI). Subjects completed a computerised Stroop colournaming task involving social/psychological threat (e.g. EMBARRASS; CRAZY), physical threat (e.g. CORONARY; SUFFOCATED), and neutral (e.g. MOTEL; TOWEL) target words. High AS subjects demonstrated more threat-related interference in colour-naming than did low AS subjects, overall. High AS menevidencedgreater interference relative to low AS men only for the social/psychological threat stimuli; highAS women evidencedgreater interference relative to low AS women only for the physical threat stimuli. Study 2 was designed to replicate and extend the novel Study 1 finding of a cognitive bias favouring the processing of social/psychological threat cues among high AS men. Participants were 20 male university students (10 high AS; 10 low AS). In addition to social/psychological threat, physical threat, and neutral words, a category of positive emotional words (e.g. HAPPINESS; CELEBRATION) was included as a supplementary control on the Stroop. Consistent with Study 1, high AS males evidenced greater Stroop interference than did low AS males, but only for social/psychological threat words. No AS group differences in Stroop interference were revealed for the physical threat or positive words. Clinical implications, and potential theoretical explanations for the gender differences, are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differentiating social phobia and panic disorder: A test of core beliefsCognitive Therapy and Research, 1995
- Anxiety sensitivity: An examination of theoretical and methodological issuesAdvances in Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1993
- Anxiety sensitivity in 1984 and panic attacks in 1987Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 1992
- Anxiety sensitivity and nonclinical panic attacksBehaviour Research and Therapy, 1991
- Does anxiety lead to selective processing of threat-related information?Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1991
- Representations of the self in social phobia: Vulnerability to social threatCognitive Therapy and Research, 1990
- The phenomenon of panic in nonclinical populations: Further evidence and methodological considerationsJournal of Anxiety Disorders, 1989
- Selective Processing of Threat Cues in Subjects with Panic AttacksCognition and Emotion, 1988
- Selective processing of threat cues in anxiety statesBehaviour Research and Therapy, 1985
- Central Orientations: A Study of Behavior Organization from Childhood to AdolescenceChild Development, 1966