Expectancy and attention bias to spiders: Dissecting anticipation and allocation processes using ERPs

Author:

Abado Elinor12ORCID,Aue Tatjana3,Pourtois Gilles4,Okon‐Singer Hadas12

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological Sciences University of Haifa Haifa Israel

2. The Integrated Brain and Behavior Research Center (IBBRC) University of Haifa Haifa Israel

3. Institute of Psychology University of Bern Bern Switzerland

4. Department of Experimental Clinical and Health Psychology Ghent University Ghent Belgium

Abstract

AbstractThe current registered report focused on the temporal dynamics of the relationship between expectancy and attention toward threat, to better understand the mechanisms underlying the prioritization of threat detection over expectancy. In the current event‐related potentials experiment, a‐priori expectancy was manipulated, and attention bias was measured, using a well‐validated paradigm. A visual search array was presented, with one of two targets: spiders (threatening) or birds (neutral). A verbal cue stating the likelihood of encountering a target preceded the array, creating congruent and incongruent trials. Following cue presentation, preparatory processes were examined using the contingent negative variation (CNV) component. Following target presentation, two components were measured: early posterior negativity (EPN) and late positive potential (LPP), reflecting early and late stages of natural selective attention toward emotional stimuli, respectively. Behaviorally, spiders were found faster than birds, and congruency effects emerged for both targets. For the CNV, a non‐significant trend of more negative amplitudes following spider cues emerged. As expected, EPN and LPP amplitudes were larger for spider targets compared to bird targets. Data‐driven, exploratory, topographical analyses revealed different patterns of activation for bird cues compared to spider cues. Furthermore, 400–500 ms post‐target, a congruency effect was revealed only for bird targets. Together, these results demonstrate that while expectancy for spider appearance is evident in differential neural preparation, the actual appearance of spider target overrides this expectancy effect and only in later stages of processing does the cueing effect come again into play.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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