Publication | Closed Access
When time slows down: The influence of threat on time perception in anxiety
199
Citations
27
References
2009
Year
Affective NeuroscienceIndividual DifferencesAttentionSocial SciencesPsychologyReaction TimeAffective ScienceEmotional ResponseEmotion RegulationTemporal DynamicAffect PerceptionHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceAnxious IndividualsExperimental PsychologyAttention ControlTemporal ComplexityEmotionThreat StimuliAdaptive EmotionTime Perception
Abstract Here, we explored the effect of exposure to threat versus neutral stimuli on time perception in anxious (n=29) and non-anxious (n=29) individuals using predictions from the attentional gate model (AGM) of time perception. Results indicate that relative to non-anxious individuals, anxious individuals subjectively experience time as moving more slowly when exposed to short (2-second) presentations of threat stimuli, and that group differences disappear with longer exposure durations (4 and 8 seconds). Coupled with classic reports of enhanced attentional bias toward threat and diminished attentional control under stress in anxious individuals this finding provides novel insights into low-level cognitive processes that could shape and maintain the subjective experience of anxiety. Findings are discussed in relation to predictions from the AGM and cognitive accounts of anxiety. Keywords: AnxietyAttention biasTime perceptionFaceArousal Acknowledgements This study was supported by an Israeli Science Foundation grant (ISF 964/08) to YBH.
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