Trait Anxiety
trait anxiety
Gender, trait anxiety and attentional processing in healthy young adults: is a moderated moderation theory possible?
Three studies conducted in the context of PhD work (UNIL) aimed at proving evidence to address the question of potential gender differences in trait anxiety and executive control biases on behavioral efficacy. In scope were male and female non-clinical samples of adult young age that performed non-emotional tasks assessing basic attentional functioning (Attention Network Test – Interactions, ANT-I), sustained attention (Test of Variables of Attention, TOVA), and visual recognition abilities (Object in Location Recognition Task, OLRT). Results confirmed the intricate nature of the relationship between gender and health trait anxiety through the lens of their impact on processing efficacy in males and females. The possibility of a gendered theory in trait anxiety biases is discussed.
Behavioural hypersensitivity to CO2 is associated with increased engagement of the insula in subjects with high trait anxiety
FENS Forum 2024
No two mice alike: Leveraging inter-individual variability in threat conditioning of inbred mice to model trait anxiety
FENS Forum 2024
Understanding trait anxiety through foraging decision
FENS Forum 2024