Baseline and affective startle modulation by angry and neutral faces in 4-8-year-old anxious and non-anxious children

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Author(s)
Waters, Allison M
Neumann, David L
Henry, Julie
Craske, Michelle G
Ornitz, Edward M
Year published
2008
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The present study examined the magnitudes of startle blink reflexes and electrodermal responses in 4-8-year-old high anxious children (N = 14) and non-anxious controls (N = 11). Responses were elicited by 16 auditory startle trials during a baseline phase prior to an affective modulation phase involving 12 startle trials presented during angry and neutral faces. Results showed significant response habituation across baseline trials and equivalent response magnitudes between groups during the baseline phase. The modulation of response magnitudes during angry and neutral faces did not differ significantly in either group. ...
View more >The present study examined the magnitudes of startle blink reflexes and electrodermal responses in 4-8-year-old high anxious children (N = 14) and non-anxious controls (N = 11). Responses were elicited by 16 auditory startle trials during a baseline phase prior to an affective modulation phase involving 12 startle trials presented during angry and neutral faces. Results showed significant response habituation across baseline trials and equivalent response magnitudes between groups during the baseline phase. The modulation of response magnitudes during angry and neutral faces did not differ significantly in either group. However, high anxious children showed larger responses overall compared with non-anxious control children during the affective modulation phase. Moreover, greater anxiety severity and larger startle reflexes were associated with poorer accuracy in rating neutral faces as neutral in high anxious children. Results may reflect elevated reactivity to threat contexts in 4-8-year-old high anxious versus non-anxious children.
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View more >The present study examined the magnitudes of startle blink reflexes and electrodermal responses in 4-8-year-old high anxious children (N = 14) and non-anxious controls (N = 11). Responses were elicited by 16 auditory startle trials during a baseline phase prior to an affective modulation phase involving 12 startle trials presented during angry and neutral faces. Results showed significant response habituation across baseline trials and equivalent response magnitudes between groups during the baseline phase. The modulation of response magnitudes during angry and neutral faces did not differ significantly in either group. However, high anxious children showed larger responses overall compared with non-anxious control children during the affective modulation phase. Moreover, greater anxiety severity and larger startle reflexes were associated with poorer accuracy in rating neutral faces as neutral in high anxious children. Results may reflect elevated reactivity to threat contexts in 4-8-year-old high anxious versus non-anxious children.
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Journal Title
Biological Psychology
Volume
78
Issue
1
Publisher URI
Copyright Statement
© 2008 Elsevier. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal's website for access to the definitive, published version.
Subject
Neurosciences
Cognitive and computational psychology
Biological psychology