Psychiatry research
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Psychiatry research · Dec 2014
Randomized Controlled TrialOrienting and maintenance of attention to threatening facial expressions in anxiety--an eye movement study.
Cognitive models posit that anxiety disorders stem in part from underlying attentional biases to threat. Consistent with this, studies have found that the attentional bias to threat-related stimuli is greater in high vs. low anxious individuals. Nevertheless, it is not clear if similar biases exist for different threatening emotions or for any facial emotional stimulus. ⋯ Our results for attentional maintenance were not consistent. The results of the present study suggest that attentional processes may be more emotion-specific than previously believed. Our results suggest that attentional processes for different threatening emotions may not be the same and that attentional processes for some negative and some positive emotions may be similar.
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Psychiatry research · Dec 2014
Randomized Controlled TrialPost-traumatic psychological changes among survivors of the Lushan earthquake living in the most affected areas.
The primary objective of our study was to investigate both the negative and positive psychological changes following the Lushan earthquake, and to explore the factors associated with psychological changes. Multi-stage random sampling was used to select respondents from Lushan County, Sichuan Province, China. A simplified Chinese version of the short form of Changes in Outlook Questionnaire (CiOQ-S) was used to assess psychological changes in earthquake survivors. ⋯ The factors associated with positive psychological changes included ethnic minority, high level of education, high household income, not injured in the earthquake, not trapped during the earthquake, and having experienced the Wenchuan earthquake. The factors associated with negative psychological changes included female gender, ethnic minority, low household income, history of diseases, injured during the earthquake, and trapped during the earthquake. The current analysis helps expand our knowledge of the negative and positive psychological changes that may occur following an earthquake experience.