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Biases in orienting and maintenance of attention among weight dissatisfied women: An eye-movement study

Authors :
Hong Chen
Xiao Gao
Yi Liang
Todd Jackson
Guang Zhao
Quanchuan Wang
Source :
Behaviour Research and Therapy. 49:252-259
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2011.

Abstract

Despite evidence indicating fatness and thinness information are processed differently among weight-preoccupied and eating disordered individuals, the exact nature of these attentional biases is not clear. In this research, eye movement (EM) tracking assessed biases in specific component processes of visual attention (i.e., orientation, detection, maintenance and disengagement of gaze) in relation to body-related stimuli among 20 weight dissatisfied (WD) and 20 weight satisfied young women. Eye movements were recorded while participants completed a dot-probe task that featured fatness-neutral and thinness-neutral word pairs. Compared to controls, WD women were more likely to direct their initial gaze toward fatness words, had a shorter mean latency of first fixation on both fatness and thinness words, had longer first fixation on fatness words but shorter first fixation on thinness words, and shorter total gaze duration on thinness words. Reaction time data showed a maintenance bias towards fatness words among the WD women. In sum, results indicated WD women show initial orienting, speeded detection and initial maintenance biases towards fat body words in addition to a speeded detection - avoidance pattern of biases in relation to thin body words. In sum, results highlight the importance of the utility of EM-tracking as a means of identifying subtle attentional biases among weight dissatisfied women drawn from a non-clinical setting and the need to assess attentional biases as a dynamic process.

Details

ISSN :
00057967
Volume :
49
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a680bd23dad46c66c82902097c4bd23
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2011.01.009