4.6 Article

Attentional processing biases to threat in schizophrenia: Evidence from a free-viewing task with emotional scenes

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 144, Issue -, Pages 80-86

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.09.044

Keywords

Eye tracking; Eye movements; Emotion; Attention; Psychopathology

Categories

Funding

  1. Carlos III Health Institute (Spanish Ministry of Economy and Innovation) [CM19/00078, FPU18/01997, JR17/00003, PI18/01352]

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The study found that individuals with schizophrenia exhibit longer gaze duration and higher percentage of total fixations and total duration towards threatening scenes compared to non-social ones. This indicates an attentional bias towards threatening scenes in terms of attentional maintenance and engagement, but not in initial orienting.
Attentional biases to threatening stimuli have been suggested to play a key role in the onset and course of schizophrenia. However, current research has not completely demonstrated this assumption. The aim of this eye tracking study was to shed light on the underlying psychological mechanisms of schizophrenia by examining the attentional processing of socio-emotional information. Forty-four individuals with schizophrenia and 47 healthy controls were assessed in a 3-s free-viewing task with a social scene (i.e., happy, threatening, or neutral) in competition with a non-social one to determine the effects of emotional information on the different stages of the attentional processing. The location and latency of initial fixations (i.e., initial orienting), the firs-pass fixations and gaze duration (i.e., attentional engagement), and the percentage of total duration and total fixations (i.e., attentional maintenance) were analyzed. It was found that the schizophrenia group showed longer first-pass gaze duration, as well as higher percentage of total fixations and total duration toward threatening scenes in relation to the non-social ones, compared to controls. Therefore, an attentional bias toward threatening scenes in schizophrenia was found in the attentional maintenance and engagement, but not in the initial orienting of attention. Of note, the threat-related attentional bias was not associated with positive symptoms of schizophrenia. These findings offer empirical support to affective-information processing models stating that threatening information may confer psychological vulnerability to develop schizophrenia. Moreover, the results can improve psychological treatments, such as attentional bias modification paradigms or cognitive-behavior interventions managing maladaptive schemas related to threat.

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