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  1. Heightened ruminative disposition is associated with impaired attentional disengagement from negative relative to positive information: support for the “impaired disengagement” hypothesis.Felicity Southworth, Ben Grafton, Colin MacLeod & Ed Watkins - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (3).
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  • Attention and interpretation processes and trait anger experience, expression, and control.Keren Maoz, Amy B. Adler, Paul D. Bliese, Maurice L. Sipos, Phillip J. Quartana & Yair Bar-Haim - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (7):1453-1464.
    This study explored attention and interpretation biases in processing facial expressions as correlates of theoretically distinct self-reported anger experience, expression, and control. Non-selected undergraduate students completed cognitive tasks measuring attention bias, interpretation bias, and Spielberger’s State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory. Attention bias toward angry faces was associated with higher trait anger and anger expression and with lower anger control-in and anger control-out. The propensity to quickly interpret ambiguous faces as angry was associated with greater anger expression and its subcomponent of anger (...)
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  • Associations between attentional biases for emotional images and rumination in depression.Leanne Quigley, Kristin Russell, Christine Yung, Keith S. Dobson & Christopher R. Sears - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    Rumination is a key feature of depression and contributes to its onset, maintenance, and recurrence. Researchers have proposed that biases in the attentional processing of emotional information may underlie rumination, and particularly, the brooding component. This investigation evaluated associations between attentional biases for emotional images and rumination, including both brooding and reflection, in currently and never depressed participants. In two separate studies, participants viewed sets of four emotional images (happy, sad, threatening, and neutral) for 8 s in a free-viewing eye-tracking (...)
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  • Does anxiety-linked attentional bias to threatening information reflect bias in the setting of attentional goals, or bias in the execution of attentional goals?Julian Basanovic & Colin MacLeod - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (3).
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  • Attentional Bias and Training in Individuals With High Dental Anxiety.Jedidiah Siev, Evelyn Behar & Meghan R. Fortune - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  • A review of cognitive biases in youth depression: attention, interpretation and memory. [REVIEW]Belinda Platt, Allison M. Waters, Gerd Schulte-Koerne, Lina Engelmann & Elske Salemink - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 31 (3):462-483.
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  • A Promising Candidate to Reliably Index Attentional Bias Toward Alcohol Cues–An Adapted Odd-One-Out Visual Search Task.Janika Heitmann, Nienke C. Jonker & Peter J. de Jong - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Attentional bias has been suggested to contribute to the persistence of substance use behavior. However, the empirical evidence for its proposed role in addiction is inconsistent. This might be due to the inability of commonly used measures to differentiate between attentional engagement and attentional disengagement. Attesting to the importance of differentiating between both components of AB, a recent study using the odd-one-out task showed that substance use was differentially related to engagement and disengagement bias. However, the AB measures derived from (...)
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  • Attentional Bias in Alcohol and Cannabis Use Disorder Outpatients as Indexed by an Odd-One-Out Visual Search Task: Evidence for Speeded Detection of Substance Cues but Not for Heightened Distraction.Janika Heitmann & Peter J. de Jong - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Current cognitive models of addiction imply that speeded detection and increased distraction from substance cues might both independently contribute to the persistence of addictive behavior. Speeded detection might lower the threshold for experiencing craving, whereas increased distraction might further increase the probability of entering a bias-craving-bias cycle, thereby lowering the threshold for repeated substance use. This study was designed to examine whether indeed both attentional processes are involved in substance use disorders. Both attentional processes were indexed by an Odd-One-Out visual (...)
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