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Age-related changes in attentional control across adolescence
Creator
Lau, J, King's College London
Study number / PID
851952 (UKDA)
10.5255/UKDA-SN-851952 (DOI)
Data access
Open
Series
Not available
Abstract
This study set out to establish the novel use of the go/no-go Overlap task for investigating the role of attentional control capacities in the processing of emotional expressions across different age-groups within adolescence: at the onset of adolescence (11-12 year-olds) and toward the end of adolescence (17-18 year-olds). We also looked at how attentional control in the processing of fearful, happy, and neutral expressions relates to individual differences in trait anxiety in these adolescent groups. We were able to show that younger adolescents, but not older adolescents had more difficulties with attention control in the presence of all faces, but particularly in the presence of fearful faces. Moreover, we found that across all groups, adolescents with higher trait anxiety exhibited attentional avoidance of all faces, which facilitated relatively better performance on the primary task. These differences in reaction time emerged in the context of comparable accuracy level in the primary task across age-groups. Our results contribute to our understanding of how attentional control abilities to faces but in particular fearful expressions may mature across adolescence. This may affect learning about the environment and the acquisition of behavioral response patterns in the social world. Anxiety is common and affects many areas of life including social relationships, school/work, and long-term well-being. As most anxiety problems start in adolescence, we need more research investigating how and why some young people develop anxiety and how these causes can be targeted in early-life. Anxiety may arise because of a hyperactive fear system. The fear system is usually activated by danger, but it can also respond to situations that resemble, but are not actually dangerous. Learning to differentiate what is dangerous from what is safe is critical to understanding anxiety.
This study investigates whether more anxious adolescents will show greater fear to threat cues...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
31/01/2012 - 01/01/2013
Country
United Kingdom
Time dimension
Not available
Analysis unit
Individual
Universe
Not available
Sampling procedure
Not available
Kind of data
Numeric
Data collection mode
Participants were recruited from local schools and were asked to complete some questionnaires and experimental tasks on a laptop computer.