Christian Long’s research while affiliated with University of the Western Cape and other places

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Publications (1)


Illustrative depiction of event during attentional bias assessment task
The Contribution of Attentional Bias to Negative Information to Social Anxiety-Linked Heightened State Anxiety During a Social Event
  • Article
  • Full-text available

May 2023

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136 Reads

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3 Citations

Cognitive Therapy and Research

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Christian Long

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Colin MacLeod

Background It has been proposed that people with high compared to low trait social anxiety pay greater attention to negative information concerning upcoming social events, and that such attentional bias drives the disproportionately elevated levels of state anxiety they exhibit in response to these events. These two hypotheses have not yet been adequately tested. Method We recruited participants who were high or low in trait social anxiety. Participants completed a mock job interview, and reported their state anxiety during this experience. Prior attentional bias to negative, relative to benign, information concerning this event was assessed using a variant of the dual probe approach, in which participants were exposed to dual videos, each comprising two video clips of people who had completed the mock job interview, discussing either negative or benign aspects of this experience. Results High compared to low trait social anxiety participants displayed higher attentional bias to negative social information, and this bias mediated the association between elevated trait social anxiety and heightened state anxiety experienced during the mock job interview. Conclusions These findings demonstrate that elevated trait social anxiety is characterized by an attentional bias to negative, relative to benign, information concerning an upcoming social event, and that this attentional bias statistically predicts the disproportionately elevated state anxiety that people with high trait social anxiety experience during such an event.

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Citations (1)


... This desirable quality arises from the nature of trait anxiety and attentional bias toward negative information. Given that trait anxiety reflects a tendency to disproportionately experience elevated state anxiety when exposed to emotional information, attentional bias amplifies this effect by prioritizing the processing of negative aspects over benign aspects of the presented emotional information (Grafton et al., 2023;Tough et al., 2025). Therefore, in addition to the assessment of attentional bias and trait anxiety, we also assessed state anxiety at key junctures of the study to compute the degree to which exposure to emotional information conveyed by our stimulus videos elevates state anxiety. ...

Reference:

The Talking Heads Attentional Bias Assessment Task: A Readily Available, Reliable, and Effective Task for Assessing Attentional Bias
The Contribution of Attentional Bias to Negative Information to Social Anxiety-Linked Heightened State Anxiety During a Social Event

Cognitive Therapy and Research