Mobile Eye Tracking Captures Changes in Attention Over Time During a Naturalistic Threat Paradigm in Behaviorally Inhibited Children

Kelley E. Gunther, Kayla M. Brown, Xiaoxue Fu, Leigha A. MacNeill, Morgan Jones, Briana Ermanni, Koraly Pérez-Edgar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Attentional biases to and away from threat are considered hallmarks of temperamental behavioral inhibition (BI), which is a documented risk factor for social anxiety disorder. However, most research on affective attentional biases has traditionally been constrained to computer screens, where stimuli often lack ecological validity. Moreover, prior research predominantly focuses on momentary presentations of stimuli, rather than examining how attention may change over the course of prolonged exposure to salient people and objects. Here, in a sample of children oversampled for BI, we used mobile eye-tracking to examine attention to an experimenter wearing a “scary” or novel gorilla mask, as well as attention to the experimenter after mask removal as a recovery from exposure. Conditional growth curve modeling was used to examine how level of BI related to attentional trajectories over the course of the exposure. We found a main effect of BI in the initial exposure to the mask, with a positive association between level of BI and proportion of gaze allocated to the stranger’s masked face over time. Additionally, there was a main effect of BI on proportion of gaze allocated to the stranger’s face plus their mask during the recovery period when the mask was removed.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)495-505
Number of pages11
JournalAffective Science
Volume2
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2021

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Behavioral Neuroscience
  • Clinical Psychology
  • Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
  • Social Psychology

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