BACKGROUND:Previous studies revealed increased parietal late positive potentials (LPPs) in response to spider pictures in spider phobic individuals. This study searched for basic features of fear-relevant stimuli by investigating whether schematic spider images are sufficient to evoke differential behavioral as well as differential early and late ERP responses in spider phobic, social phobic (as a clinical control group), and non-phobic control participants. METHODS:Behavioral and electrophysiological correlates of the processing of schematic spider and flower images were investigated while participants performed a color (emotional Stroop) and an object identification task. Stimuli were schematic pictures of spiders and flowers matched with respect to constituting visual elements. RESULTS:Consistent with previous studies using photographic spider pictures, spider phobic persons showed enhanced LPPs when identifying schematic spiders compared to schematic flowers. In addition, spider phobic individuals showed generally faster responses than the control groups. This effect was interpreted as evidence for an increased general behavioral hypervigilance in this anxiety disorder group. Furthermore, both phobic groups showed enhanced P100 amplitudes compared to controls, which was interpreted as evidence for an increased (cortical) hypervigilance for incoming stimuli in phobic patients in general. Finally, all groups showed faster identification of and larger N170 amplitudes in response to schematic spider than flower pictures. This may reflect either a general advantage for fear-relevant compared to neutral stimuli, or might be due to a higher level of expertise in processing schematic spiders as compared to the more artificially looking flower stimuli. CONCLUSION:Results suggest that schematic spiders are sufficient to prompt differential responses in spider-fearful and spider-non-fearful persons in late ERP components. Early ERP components, on the other hand, seem to be modified by anxiety status per se, which is consistent with recent theories on general hypervigilance in the anxiety disorder spectrum.

译文

背景:以前的研究表明,在恐惧蜘蛛的个体中,对蜘蛛图片的顶壁晚期正电位(LPPs)增加。这项研究通过调查示意性蜘蛛图像是否足以引起蜘蛛恐惧症,社交恐惧症(作为临床对照组)和非恐惧症中的差异行为以及差异化的早期和晚期ERP反应,从而寻找与恐惧相关的刺激的基本特征。控制参与者。
方法:在参与者执行颜色(情绪化的Stroop)和对象识别任务的过程中,研究了示意性蜘蛛和花朵图像处理的行为和电生理相关性。刺激是与构成视觉元素相匹配的蜘蛛和花朵的示意图。
结果:与以前使用摄影蜘蛛图片进行的研究一致,与原理图花朵相比,畏惧蜘蛛的人在识别原理图蜘蛛时显示出增强的LPP。另外,蜘蛛恐惧症个体通常显示出比对照组更快的反应。该效应被解释为该焦虑症组中一般行为过度警觉性增加的证据。此外,与对照组相比,两个恐惧组均显示出增强的P100振幅,这可以解释为总体而言,恐惧患者传入刺激的(皮质)超警觉性增加的证据。最后,所有组均显示出对蜘蛛网的响应比花卉图片更快地识别N170振幅,并具有更大的N170振幅。与中性刺激相比,这可能反映与恐惧相关的一般优势,或者可能是由于与较人为看似的花刺激相比,在处理示意性蜘蛛上的专业知识水平更高。
结论:结果表明,原理图蜘蛛足以在ERP后期的恐惧蜘蛛和非恐惧蜘蛛患者中引起差异反应。另一方面,早期的ERP组件似乎已被焦虑状态本身所改变,这与最近关于焦虑症谱系的一般超警觉的理论相一致。

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