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©The Author(s) 2017.
World J Psychiatr. Sep 22, 2017; 7(3): 133-147
Published online Sep 22, 2017. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v7.i3.133
Published online Sep 22, 2017. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v7.i3.133
Eye tracker information pertinent to differential diagnosis | Anxiety | Generalized anxiety disorder | Depression | Phobia | SAD | Post-traumatic stress disorder | Obsessive compulsive disorder | Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder |
Attentional Bias (the tendency to attend to certain stimuli at the expense of others) | Tend to focus on threatening stimuli. Selectively attend to more threatening stimuli | Tend to focus on mood-congruent stimuli (e.g., SAD, negative) | Tend to avoid feared stimuli | More sensitive to faces showing emotion over neutral faces | Tend to focus on threatening stimuli | Tend to focus on aversive stimuli | ||
Orienting Bias (faster detection of certain stimuli) | Faster detection of threatening stimuli | Faster detection of threatening stimuli. Orientation to threatening faces before neutral faces | Slower to detect threatening stimuli (compared to anxiety or generalized anxiety disorder) | Faster orientation to feared stimulus | Faster detection of threatening stimuli | |||
Frequency of eye movements | Higher frequency of eye-movements | Higher frequency of eye-movements | Slower frequency of eye movements than in anxiety or generalized anxiety disorder | More fixations during a visual search task than anxiety and nonclinical populations | Higher frequency of eye movements | |||
Engagement/disengagement of stimuli | After detecting feared stimulus, quick disengagement with the stimulus | Takes longer to disengage from a threatening facial expression than other expressions | Do not show the same type of disengagement as people with a phobias | |||||
Stimulus avoidance | Lack of interest in positive stimuli - focus instead on mood-congruent stimuli | After detecting feared stimulus - quick disengagement and avoidance of feared stimulus | Avoidance of eye-contact and faces in general, even if faces are pleasant. Correlation between severity of SAD and the amount of gaze avoidance | |||||
Fixations, saccades, and pupil dilation | Make less fixations (closer to nonclinical populations) than people with obsessive compulsive disorder during a visual search task | Longer fixations on mood-congruent stimuli than those who have anxiety | Greater pupil dilation in general than nonclinical populations | Longer and more frequent fixations towards aversive stimuli. Deficits in goal-oriented visual tasks (higher error rates, inaccurate eye movements for the specific task) | Premature saccades occur more frequently than in nonclinical populations. Higher error rates on anti-saccades tasks than non-clinical populations |
- Citation: Abbott D, Shirali Y, Haws JK, Lack CW. Biobehavioral assessment of the anxiety disorders: Current progress and future directions. World J Psychiatr 2017; 7(3): 133-147
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2220-3206/full/v7/i3/133.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v7.i3.133