@article{1376d53eea1d4409810009e13f8419cd,
title = "Cascading effects: The influence of attention bias to threat on the interpretation of ambiguous information",
abstract = "Both attention bias to threat and negative interpretive bias have been implicated in the emergence and maintenance of anxiety disorders. However, relations between attention and interpretive biases remain poorly understood. The current study experimentally manipulated attention bias to threat and examined the effects of attention training on the way ambiguous information was interpreted. Results suggest that the preferential allocation of attention towards threat affects the manner in which ambiguous information is interpreted. Individuals trained to attend to threat were more likely than individuals in a placebo training group to interpret ambiguous information in a threat-related manner. These data suggest that perturbations in the initial stages of information processing associated with anxiety may lead to a cascade of subsequent processing biases.",
keywords = "Anxiety, Attention bias, Attention training, Information processing, Interpretive bias",
author = "White, {Lauren K.} and Suway, {Jenna G.} and Pine, {Daniel S.} and Yair Bar-Haim and Fox, {Nathan A.}",
note = "Funding Information: This research was supported in part by an NRSA grant (1F31MH085424) from NIH awarded to L.K. White and a Distinguished Scientist Award from NARSAD to N.A. Fox. We would like to thank the anonymous reviewer for his/her valuable suggestions and detailed comments.",
year = "2011",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1016/j.brat.2011.01.004",
language = "אנגלית",
volume = "49",
pages = "244--251",
journal = "Behaviour Research and Therapy",
issn = "0005-7967",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd.",
number = "4",
}