Subclinical anxiety and depression are associated with deficits in attentional target facilitation, not distractor inhibition
Citation
Pike, Alexandra C., Printzlau, Frida, von Lautz, Alexander, H. Harmer, Catherine J, Stokes, Mark G, Noonan, MaryAnn P. Subclinical anxiety and depression are associated with deficits in attentional target facilitation, not distractor inhibition. Preprint published online June 2019: DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/XRDYB
Abstract
Mood and anxiety disorders are associated with deficits in attentional control
involving emotive and non-emotive stimuli. Current theories focus on impaired
attentional inhibition of distracting stimuli in producing these deficits. However,
standard attention tasks struggle to separate distractor inhibition from target
facilitation. Here, we investigate whether distractor inhibition underlies these
deficits using neutral stimuli in a behavioural task specifically designed to tease
apart these two attentional processes. Healthy participants performed a validated
four-location Posner cueing paradigm and completed self-report questionnaires
measuring depressive symptoms and trait anxiety. Using regression analyses, we
found no relationship between distractor inhibition and mood or anxiety
symptoms. However, we find a relationship between target facilitation and both
depression and anxiety. Specifically, higher depressive symptoms were
associated with reduced target facilitation, and higher anxiety symptoms were
associated with enhanced target facilitation in a task-version in which the target
location repeated over a block of trials. By contrast, we find the opposite
direction of relationships in a task-version in which the location of the
forthcoming target was cued on a trial-wise basis. This dissociation may point to
separate mechanisms underlying the relationships between depressive and
anxiety symptoms and attention and warrants further investigation in clinical
populations.
Description
https//:DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/XRDYB
Collections
- Depressive Disorders [111]