Authors
Andrew Mathews, Anne Richards, Michael Eysenck
Publication date
1989/2
Journal
Journal of abnormal psychology
Volume
98
Issue
1
Pages
31
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
In previous studies, we have established that anxiety states are characterized by an attentional bias that favors the processing of threatening stimuli. In the present study we extend this finding to ambiguous stimuli, specifically, homophones with spellings that correspond to either a threatening or a neutral meaning. As predicted, clinically anxious subjects used the threatening spellings relatively more than did controls, whereas recovered subjects were intermediate in this respect. Threatening words were associated with greater skin conductance responses than were neutral words, but the groups did not differ in their electrodermal reactions to homophones. We take these findings as evidence that, although the different meanings of ambiguous stimuli may be processed in parallel by all subjects, an interpretive bias operates such that anxiety-prone individuals tend to become preferentially aware of the more …
Total citations
19911992199319941995199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241081313138149121412141324131716211513162425242017139111115352
Scholar articles
A Mathews, A Richards, M Eysenck - Journal of abnormal psychology, 1989