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© Cambridge University Press 2004 and Cambridge University Press, 2009. Maintenance or capture of attention in anxiety-related biases? Anxiety is a complex experience, which serves as a biological warning system and is generally activated by the perception of danger in the environment. Normal levels of anxiety, while somewhat difficult to quantify, allow for the rapid identification of potential threat and the preparation of an appropriate response. However, anxiety levels can become abnormal when the intensity and duration of anxious episodes are disproportional to the potential for harm, or when they occur without any clear threat. In the last two decades, significant advances have been made in the understanding of how a variety of cognitive processes (e.g. attention and memory) are affected in emotional disorders. In particular, the work of Andrew Mathews and his colleagues has been influential in promoting the idea that fundamental biases in the way in which information is processed may underlie many of the characteristic problems of anxiety and depression (e.g. Mathews & Bradley, 1983; Mathews & MacLeod, 1985; Mathews, Mogg, May & Eysenck, 1989). This empirical research programme has resulted in the development of a coherent and influential framework for the understanding of emotional disorders (e.g. Mathews & MacLeod, 1994; Williams, Watts, MacLeod & Mathews, 1988, 1997). It is a great pleasure to contribute a chapter to this Festschrift for Andrew. From my very first submitted paper to <italic>Cognition and Emotion</italic> (for which Andrew was the action editor) to more recent direct collaborations, my own research and thinking have been strongly influenced by Andrew's depth of knowledge and understanding of the cognitive processes involved in emotion and emotional disorders.

Original publication

DOI

10.1017/CBO9780511521263.006

Type

Chapter

Book title

Cognition, Emotion and Psychopathology: Theoretical, Empirical and Clinical Directions

Publication Date

01/01/2004

Pages

86 - 106