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BACKGROUND: Anxiety vulnerability is associated with biases in attention: a tendency to selectively process negative relative to neutral or positive information. It is not clear whether this bias is: 1) related to the physiological response to stressful events, and 2) causally related to the development of anxiety disorders. METHODS: We tested the predictive value of both preconscious and conscious attention biases in a prospective study of stress reactivity in a nonclinical sample. One hundred four male participants were assessed at baseline and then again 4 months (n = 82) and 8 months later (n = 70). Salivary cortisol and self-report measures were obtained at the baseline testing session in addition to measures of biased attention. Subsequent emotional reactivity was assessed by means of salivary cortisol and self-reported state-anxiety responses during a laboratory-based stressor (4 months later) as well as during a real-life stressor 8 months later (i.e., examination period). RESULTS: Regression analyses indicated that a preconscious negative processing bias was the best predictor of the cortisol response to stressful events. Importantly, a measure of selective processing provided a better indicator of subsequent emotional reactivity than self-report measures of neuroticism, trait-anxiety, and extraversion. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that preconscious biases toward negative material play a causal role in heightened anxiety vulnerability. Our results illustrate the potential utility of preconscious biases in attention in providing an early marker of anxiety vulnerability and a potential target for treatment intervention.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.biopsych.2009.11.018

Type

Journal article

Journal

Biol Psychiatry

Publication Date

15/02/2010

Volume

67

Pages

371 - 377

Keywords

Adolescent, Adult, Attention, Bias, Emotions, Expressed Emotion, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Hydrocortisone, Male, Photic Stimulation, Predictive Value of Tests, Radioimmunoassay, Reaction Time, Retrospective Studies, Saliva, Stress, Psychological, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult