1. Hypervigilance and depression as predictors of eye tracking to ambiguous pictures in trauma survivors.
- Author
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Kimble, Matthew, Cappello, Olivia, and Fleming, Kevin
- Subjects
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EYE tracking , *POST-traumatic stress , *ATTENTIONAL bias , *NEGATIVITY bias , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *MENTAL depression , *COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Hypervigilance, attentional bias, and negative views of the world play a significant role in post trauma symptomatology and can be associated with both clinical depression and posttraumatic stress. However, both theory and research suggest there may be discernible differences in attentional patterns between these two outcomes. While depression may be associated with a general negativity bias, posttraumatic stress may be specifically associated with visual scanning, hypervigilance, and threat detection. In this study, seventy-seven community trauma survivors completed self-assessments for hypervigilance, depression, and posttraumatic cognitions and then had their eyes tracked while looking at a series of thirty neutral but ambiguous and complex pictures on a computer screen. Mean age of the sample was 36.3 with 52 % of the sample identifying as female. We found that hypervigilance scores and negative views of the world predicted both the number of fixations and area of the picture covered. These factors did not predict pupil size. These findings suggest that there are discernable gaze patterns after trauma associated with posttraumatic stress but not depression. Specifically, ambiguous pictures generate more fixations and scanning that is associated with vigilance but not depression. • Attentional abnormalities are common in those who have experienced psychological trauma • Abnormalities such as hypervigilance and depression may be associated with functional impairments in attention • Eye tracking technology has the potential to assess fairly automatically behavioral measures of attention • Hypervigilance but not depression predicted the number of fixations and percent of the image covered to ambiguous pictures • The findings suggest that there are discernible gaze patterns associated with posttraumatic stress but not depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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