
AbstractHow attachment style affects emotion processing is tightly connected with individuals’ attention bias. This experiment explored avoidant individuals’ attentional engagement and attentional disengagement using a cue-target paradigm in fMRI. The experimental group consisted of 17 avoidant participants, while the control group consisted of 16 secure participants; these were identified by the Experiences in Close Relationships inventory and the Relationship Questionnaire. Each reacted to pictures of positive parent-child attachment, negative parent-child attachment, positive romantic attachment, negative romantic attachment, and neutral non-attachment. Behaviorally, avoidant individuals were slower than secure individuals in responding to emotions and their attentional disengagement effect for negative parent-child emotions was stronger than positive ones. fMRI results showed that avoidant compared to secure individuals activated more strongly in the right superior temporal gyrus, middle occipital gyrus, and the left medial frontal gyrus, middle occipital gyrus, supplementary motor area, and cingulate gyrus. They also showed stronger activation in disengaging from positive than negative emotions in the bilateral fusiform and middle occipital gyri. In conclusion, avoidant individuals could detect emotions as effective as secure individuals in attentioal engaging stages. They can disengage from positive emotions with effective cognitive resources and were harder to get rid of negative emotions with insufficient resource.
Adult, Male, Disengagement theory, Social Psychology, Developmental psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Adult Attachment, Emotions, Social Sciences, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Article, Attentional Bias, Young Adult, Cognition, Avoidance Learning, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Attentional Networks, Humans, Psychology, Attachment theory, Attention, Middle temporal gyrus, Analysis of Variance, Brain Mapping, Attentional bias, Middle frontal gyrus, Parent-Child Attachment, Brain, Life Sciences, Neural Mechanisms of Cognitive Control and Decision Making, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Object Attachment, Cognitive Mechanisms of Anxiety and Depression, FOS: Psychology, Emotion Regulation, Negative emotion, Medicine, Female, Theoretical Developments in Attachment and Relationships, Gerontology, Neuroscience, Fusiform gyrus
Adult, Male, Disengagement theory, Social Psychology, Developmental psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Adult Attachment, Emotions, Social Sciences, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Article, Attentional Bias, Young Adult, Cognition, Avoidance Learning, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Attentional Networks, Humans, Psychology, Attachment theory, Attention, Middle temporal gyrus, Analysis of Variance, Brain Mapping, Attentional bias, Middle frontal gyrus, Parent-Child Attachment, Brain, Life Sciences, Neural Mechanisms of Cognitive Control and Decision Making, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Object Attachment, Cognitive Mechanisms of Anxiety and Depression, FOS: Psychology, Emotion Regulation, Negative emotion, Medicine, Female, Theoretical Developments in Attachment and Relationships, Gerontology, Neuroscience, Fusiform gyrus
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