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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The effects of social pressure and emotional expression on the cone of gaze in patients with social anxiety disorder

Johannes HarbortHeiko HechtJulia SpiegelMichael Witthöft

subject

AdultMaleVisual perceptionAdolescentgenetic structuresExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyFixation OcularStimulus (physiology)050105 experimental psychologyArousalDevelopmental psychologyYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)HumansExpressed emotionAttention0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEmotional expressionValence (psychology)AgedPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesAnalysis of Variance05 social sciencesSocial anxietyPhobia SocialMiddle AgedGazeExpressed EmotionPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyVisual PerceptionFemalesense organsPsychologyPhotic Stimulation030217 neurology & neurosurgeryCognitive psychology

description

Abstract Background and objectives Patients with social anxiety disorder suffer from pronounced fears in social situations. As gaze perception is crucial in these situations, we examined which factors influence the range of gaze directions where mutual gaze is experienced (the cone of gaze). Methods The social stimulus was modified by changing the number of people (heads) present and the emotional expression of their faces. Participants completed a psychophysical task, in which they had to adjust the eyes of a virtual head to gaze at the edge of the range where mutual eye-contact was experienced. Results The number of heads affected the width of the gaze cone: the more heads, the wider the gaze cone. The emotional expression of the virtual head had no consistent effect on the width of the gaze cone, it did however affect the emotional state of the participants. Angry expressions produced the highest arousal values. Highest valence emerged from happy faces, lowest valence from angry faces. Conclusion These results suggest that the widening of the gaze cone in social anxiety disorder is not primarily mediated by their altered emotional reactivity. Implications for gaze assessment and gaze training in therapeutic contexts are discussed. Limitations Due to interindividual variability, enlarged gaze cones are not necessarily indicative of social anxiety disorder, they merely constitute a correlate at the group level.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbtep.2016.11.004