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  • Examination of emotional priming among children and young adolescents: Developmental issues and its association with anxiety

    Author(s)
    Spence, Susan H
    Lipp, Ottmar V
    Liberman, Lisa
    March, Sonja
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Spence, Susan H H.
    Year published
    2006
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    An affective priming task was used to examine bias in the processing of threat-related material in 25 clinically anxious compared to 25 matched, non-anxious control children and young adolescents. No significant differences were found between anxious and non-anxious children in terms of priming effects. However, age-related differences were found depending upon the valence of the target, independent of anxiety status. Both younger (7 - 10 years) and older (11 - 14 years) children showed faster response times to pleasant targets when they were preceded by a congruent compared to incongruent stimulus, consistent with a traditional ...
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    An affective priming task was used to examine bias in the processing of threat-related material in 25 clinically anxious compared to 25 matched, non-anxious control children and young adolescents. No significant differences were found between anxious and non-anxious children in terms of priming effects. However, age-related differences were found depending upon the valence of the target, independent of anxiety status. Both younger (7 - 10 years) and older (11 - 14 years) children showed faster response times to pleasant targets when they were preceded by a congruent compared to incongruent stimulus, consistent with a traditional priming effect. For threat target stimuli, older children showed no difference in response latency according to the congruency of the prime-target valence. Younger children, in contrast, showed a reverse priming effect for threat target stimuli, with slower response times for threat-congruent trials than for threat targets preceded by a pleasant prime. Possible explanations for developmental differences in the processing of threat-related material are discussed.
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    Journal Title
    Australian Journal of Psychology
    Volume
    58
    Issue
    2
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1080/00049530600730468
    Subject
    Cognitive and computational psychology
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/28276
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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