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Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia

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Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia. / Kolassa, Iris- Tatjana; Kolassa, Stephan; Musial, F. et al.
In: Cognition and Emotion, Vol. 21, No. 8, 2007, p. 1721-1744.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kolassa, IT, Kolassa, S, Musial, F & Miltner, WHR 2007, 'Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia', Cognition and Emotion, vol. 21, no. 8, pp. 1721-1744. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699930701229189

APA

Kolassa, I. T., Kolassa, S., Musial, F., & Miltner, W. H. R. (2007). Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia. Cognition and Emotion, 21(8), 1721-1744. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699930701229189

Vancouver

Kolassa IT, Kolassa S, Musial F, Miltner WHR. Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia. Cognition and Emotion. 2007;21(8):1721-1744. doi: 10.1080/02699930701229189

Author

Kolassa, Iris- Tatjana ; Kolassa, Stephan ; Musial, F. et al. / Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia. In: Cognition and Emotion. 2007 ; Vol. 21, No. 8. pp. 1721-1744.

Bibtex

@article{78c83d19ff0e4046a502c9d72a612eef,
title = "Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia",
abstract = "Social phobia has been associated with an attentional bias for angry faces. This study aimed at further characterising this attentional bias by investigating reaction times, heart rates, and ERPs while social phobics, spider phobics, and controls identified either the colour or the emotional quality of angry, happy, or neutral schematic faces. The emotional expression of angry faces did not interfere with the processing of their colour in social phobics, and heart rate, N170 amplitude and parietal late positive potentials (LPPs) of these subjects were also no different from those of non-phobic subjects. However, social phobics showed generally larger P1 amplitudes than non-phobic controls with spider phobic subjects in between. No general threat advantage for angry faces was found. All groups identified neutral schematic faces faster and showed larger late positive amplitudes to neutral than to emotional faces. Furthermore, in all groups the N170 was modulated by the emotional quality of faces. This effect was most pronounced in the emotion identification task.",
author = "Kolassa, {Iris- Tatjana} and Stephan Kolassa and F. Musial and W.H.R. Miltner",
year = "2007",
doi = "10.1080/02699930701229189",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "1721--1744",
journal = "Cognition and Emotion",
issn = "0269-9931",
publisher = "Psychology Press Ltd",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Event-related potentials to schematic faces in social phobia

AU - Kolassa, Iris- Tatjana

AU - Kolassa, Stephan

AU - Musial, F.

AU - Miltner, W.H.R.

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Social phobia has been associated with an attentional bias for angry faces. This study aimed at further characterising this attentional bias by investigating reaction times, heart rates, and ERPs while social phobics, spider phobics, and controls identified either the colour or the emotional quality of angry, happy, or neutral schematic faces. The emotional expression of angry faces did not interfere with the processing of their colour in social phobics, and heart rate, N170 amplitude and parietal late positive potentials (LPPs) of these subjects were also no different from those of non-phobic subjects. However, social phobics showed generally larger P1 amplitudes than non-phobic controls with spider phobic subjects in between. No general threat advantage for angry faces was found. All groups identified neutral schematic faces faster and showed larger late positive amplitudes to neutral than to emotional faces. Furthermore, in all groups the N170 was modulated by the emotional quality of faces. This effect was most pronounced in the emotion identification task.

AB - Social phobia has been associated with an attentional bias for angry faces. This study aimed at further characterising this attentional bias by investigating reaction times, heart rates, and ERPs while social phobics, spider phobics, and controls identified either the colour or the emotional quality of angry, happy, or neutral schematic faces. The emotional expression of angry faces did not interfere with the processing of their colour in social phobics, and heart rate, N170 amplitude and parietal late positive potentials (LPPs) of these subjects were also no different from those of non-phobic subjects. However, social phobics showed generally larger P1 amplitudes than non-phobic controls with spider phobic subjects in between. No general threat advantage for angry faces was found. All groups identified neutral schematic faces faster and showed larger late positive amplitudes to neutral than to emotional faces. Furthermore, in all groups the N170 was modulated by the emotional quality of faces. This effect was most pronounced in the emotion identification task.

U2 - 10.1080/02699930701229189

DO - 10.1080/02699930701229189

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

SP - 1721

EP - 1744

JO - Cognition and Emotion

JF - Cognition and Emotion

SN - 0269-9931

IS - 8

ER -