Inhibitory Control for Emotional and Neutral Scenes in Competition: An Eye-Tracking Study in Bipolar Disorder
Ikusi/ Ireki
Data
2017Egilea
García-Blanco, Ana
Salmerón, Ladislao
Perea, Manuel
Ana García-Blanco, Ladislao Salmerón, Manuel Perea, Inhibitory Control for Emotional and Neutral Scenes in Competition: An Eye-Tracking Study in Bipolar Disorder, Biological Psychology, Volume 127, 2017, Pages 82-88, ISSN 0301-0511, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsycho.2017.05.006.
Laburpena
This study examined the inhibitory control of attention to social scenes in manic, depressive, and euthymic episodes of bipolar disorder (BD). Two scenes were simultaneously presented (happy/threatening/neutral [target] versus control). Participants were asked either to look at the emotional pictures (i.e., attend-to-emotional block) or to avoid looking at the emotional pictures (i.e., attend-to-neutral block) while their eye movements were recorded. The initial orienting (latency and percentage of first fixation) and subsequent attentional engagement (gaze duration) were computed. Manic patients showed a higher percentage of initial fixations on happy scenes than on the other scenes, regardless of the instructions. However, in the attend-to-neutral block, their gaze durations were longest for threatening scenes. Inhibitory control was not modulated by the scene's emotional salience in the other groups. Thus, manic patients had difficulties voluntarily ignoring emotional information – this was characterized by a happy-related bias during initial orienting, but a threat-related bias during attentional engagement.