Logo image
Loneliness and attention to social threat in young adults: findings from an eye tracker study
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Loneliness and attention to social threat in young adults: findings from an eye tracker study

Munirah Bangee, Rebecca Nowland, Nikola Bridges, Ken J. Rotenberg and Pamela Qualter
Personaility and Individual Differences, Vol.63, pp.16-23
2014

Abstract

Loneliness hyper-vigilance social threat rejection eye-tracker attentional bias attention Psychology
Cacioppo and Hawkley (2009) have hypothesized that lonely people are hyper-vigilant to social threat, with earlier work (Jones & Carver, 1991) linking this bias specifically to threats of social rejection or social exclusion. The current study examined this hypothesis in eighty-five young adults (mean age = 18.22;SD = 0.46; 17–19 years in age) using eye-tracking methodology, which entailed recording their visual attention to social rejecting information. We found a quadratic relation between the participants’ loneliness, as assessed by the revised UCLA loneliness scale, and their visual attention to social threat immediately after presentation (2 s). In support of Cacioppo and Hawkley’s (2009) hypothesis, it was found that young adults in the upper quartile range of loneliness exhibited visual vigilance of socially threatening stimuli compared to other participants. There was no relation between loneliness and visual attention to socially threatening stimuli across an extended subsequent period of time. Implications for intervention are considered.
url
Link to Published VersionView
Published (Version of record)Publisher sites may require subscription to read content

Metrics

11 Record Views

Details

Logo image

Usage Policy