Biased emotional attention in patients with dental phobia

Biased motivated attention towards phobia‐relevant pictures is a typical finding in specific phobia. In the visual system, the allocation of motivated attention is indexed by two event‐related potential components – the Early Posterior Negativity and the Late Positive Potential. Enhanced Early Poste...

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Published inThe European journal of neuroscience Vol. 49; no. 2; pp. 290 - 302
Main Authors Alexopoulos, Johanna, Steinberg, Christian, Liebergesell‐Kilian, Nora Ellen, Hoeffkes, Berit, Doering, Stephan, Junghöfer, Markus
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published France Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.01.2019
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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ISSN0953-816X
1460-9568
1460-9568
DOI10.1111/ejn.14295

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Summary:Biased motivated attention towards phobia‐relevant pictures is a typical finding in specific phobia. In the visual system, the allocation of motivated attention is indexed by two event‐related potential components – the Early Posterior Negativity and the Late Positive Potential. Enhanced Early Posterior Negativity and Late Positive Potential amplitudes are reliably observed in specific phobia such as, for instance, snake, spider, or blood‐injection‐injury phobia and to some extent also in dental phobia. However, regarding dental phobia results are sparse and its theoretical concept is not undisputed. To further elucidate the electrophysiological characteristics of dental phobia, we investigated visual emotional processing in dental phobia patients and controls. Subjects viewed neutral, phobia‐irrelevant and phobia‐relevant pictures while magnetoencephalographic and behavioural measures were recorded. All patients reported a history of traumatic experiences and depressive and anxiety symptoms, as well as dissociative and posttraumatic symptoms. In the magnetoencephalography, patients showed generally less evoked neural activation at parietal and temporal regions and a reduced differentiation between picture categories compared to controls. At the behavioural level, patients rated phobia‐relevant pictures as clearly more negative as did controls. In contrast to previous reports, our results suggest that dental phobia cannot be associated with the typical effects of biased motivated attention seen in other specific phobias. Instead, results indicate that dental phobia shares typical characteristics with mild forms of posttraumatic stress disorder. Biased motivated attention towards phobia‐relevant pictures is a typical finding in specific phobia. In contrast to previous reports, we found reduced evoked neural activation at parietal and temporal regions suggesting that dental phobia cannot be associated with the typical effects of biased motivated attention seen in other specific phobias. Instead, the general hypoactivation indicates that dental phobia shares typical characteristics with mild forms of posttraumatic stress disorder.
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Edited by Ali Mazaheri. Reviewed by Andreas Mühlberger and Florian Bublatzky.
These authors contributed equally to this work and therefore both should be considered first authors.
All peer review communications can be found with the online version of the article.
ISSN:0953-816X
1460-9568
1460-9568
DOI:10.1111/ejn.14295