Journal article
Neural biases to covert and overt signals of fear: Dissociation by trait anxiety and depression
LM Williams, AH Kemp, K Felmingham, BJ Liddell, DM Palmer, RA Bryant
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | MIT PRESS | Published : 2007
Abstract
Although biases toward signals of fear may be an evolutionary adaptation necessary for survival, heightened biases may be maladaptive and associated with anxiety or depression. In this study, event-related potentials (ERPs) were used to examine the time course of neural responses to facial fear stimuli (versus neutral) presented overtly (for 500 msec with conscious attention) and covertly (for 10 msec with immediate masking to preclude conscious awareness) in 257 nonclinical subjects. We also examined the impact of trait anxiety and depression, assessed using psychometric ratings, on the time course of ERPs. In the total subject group, controlled biases to overtly processed fear were reflect..
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