Selective attention to food-related stimuli in hunger: are attentional biases specific to emotional and psychopathological states, or are they also found in normal drive states?

Previous work has indicated that anxiety disorders and eating disorders are associated with selective processing of stimuli relevant to patients' concerns (e.g. Mathews and MacLeod, 1994; Annual Review of Psychology, 45, 25-50; Channon et al., 1988; British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 27, 259-260). A dot probe task was used to investigate whether attentional biases are also a feature of a normal drive state. Specifically, we examined whether hunger is associated with biases in selective attention and in pre-attentive processes for food-relevant stimuli. Subjects with high levels of hunger showed a greater attentional bias for food-related words presented in a suprathreshold exposure condition (words shown for 500 msec), in comparison with those with low hunger. There was no evidence in the present study of a hunger-related bias in pre-attentive processes (i.e. when words were shown for 14 msec and masked). Results suggest that a non-emotional motivational state, such as hunger, is associated with a bias in certain aspects of information processing, such as selective attention, for stimuli that are relevant to the motivational state. Findings are discussed in relation to recent research into emotion-related cognitive biases.

[1]  K. Mogg,et al.  Processing of emotional information in anxious subjects. , 1990, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[2]  J. Henderson,et al.  Anxiety Disorders and Phobias: A Cognitive Perspective , 1987 .

[3]  J. Williams Cognitive Psychology and Emotional Disorders , 1991 .

[4]  Walter Schneider,et al.  Micro Experimental Laboratory: An integrated system for IBM PC compatibles , 1988 .

[5]  R. McNally,et al.  Cognitive processing of personally relevant information , 1995 .

[6]  Chris R. Brewin,et al.  COGNITIVE-PSYCHOLOGY AND EMOTIONAL DISORDERS - WILLIAMS,JMG, WATTS,FN, MACLEOD,C, MATHEWS,A , 1989 .

[7]  J. Price Anxiety Disorders and Phobias. A Cognitive Perspective . By Aaron T. Beck and Gary Emery. (Basic Books, New York, 1985.) , 1986, Journal of Biosocial Science.

[8]  C. MacLeod,et al.  Cognitive approaches to emotion and emotional disorders. , 1994, Annual review of psychology.

[9]  Donald E. Broadbent,et al.  Anxiety and Attentional Bias: State and Trait , 1988 .

[10]  F. McKenna,et al.  Habituation patterns to colour naming of eating-related stimuli in anorexics and non-clinical controls. , 1994, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[11]  Thomas H. Carr,et al.  Task-induced strategies and near-threshold priming: Conscious influences on unconscious perception. , 1989 .

[12]  S. Grand Color-word interference. II. An investigation of the role of vocal conflict and hunger in associative priming. , 1968, Journal of experimental psychology.

[13]  D. Garner,et al.  The Eating Attitudes Test: psychometric features and clinical correlates , 1982, Psychological Medicine.

[14]  D Hemsley,et al.  Selective processing of food words in anorexia nervosa. , 1988, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[15]  D. Williamson,et al.  Evidence for attention to threatening stimuli in depression. , 1996, Behaviour research and therapy.

[16]  T. Dalgleish Performance on the emotional Stroop task in groups of anxious, expert, and control subjects: A comparison of computer and card presentation formats. , 1995 .

[17]  S. Channon,et al.  The effect of short-term fasting on processing of food cues in normal subjects. , 1990 .

[18]  Colin M. Macleod Half a century of research on the Stroop effect: an integrative review. , 1991, Psychological bulletin.

[19]  K. Mogg,et al.  Attentional biases for negative information in induced and naturally occurring dysphoria. , 1997, Behaviour research and therapy.

[20]  Karin Mogg,et al.  Attentional Bias to Threat: Roles of Trait Anxiety, Stressful Events, and Awareness , 1994, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[21]  P. Anastasiades,et al.  Selective processing of eating-, shape-, and weight-related words in persons with bulimia nervosa. , 1992, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[22]  C. MacLeod,et al.  Attentional bias in emotional disorders. , 1986, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[23]  E. Lavy,et al.  Attentional Bias for Appetitive Cues: Effects of Fasting in Normal Subjects , 1993, Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy.

[24]  K. Mogg,et al.  Attentional bias in anxiety and depression: the role of awareness. , 1995, The British journal of clinical psychology.