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Failure to filter: anxious individuals show inefficient gating of threat from working memory. Front Hum Neurosci 2013;7:58

Date

03/06/2013

Pubmed ID

23459454

Pubmed Central ID

PMC3586709

DOI

10.3389/fnhum.2013.00058

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84933676527 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   101 Citations

Abstract

Dispositional anxiety is a well-established risk factor for the development of psychiatric disorders along the internalizing spectrum, including anxiety and depression. Importantly, many of the maladaptive behaviors characteristic of anxiety, such as anticipatory apprehension, occur when threat is absent. This raises the possibility that anxious individuals are less efficient at gating threat's access to working memory, a limited capacity workspace where information is actively retained, manipulated, and used to flexibly guide goal-directed behavior when it is no longer present in the external environment. Using a well-validated neurophysiological index of working memory storage, we demonstrate that threat-related distracters were difficult to filter on average and that this difficulty was exaggerated among anxious individuals. These results indicate that dispositionally anxious individuals allocate excessive working memory storage to threat, even when it is irrelevant to the task at hand. More broadly, these results provide a novel framework for understanding the maladaptive thoughts and actions characteristic of internalizing disorders.

Author List

Stout DM, Shackman AJ, Larson CL

Author

Christine Larson PhD Associate Professor in the Psychology department at University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee