Skip to main content

Spatial navigation under threat: aversive apprehensions improve route retracing in higher versus lower trait anxious individuals.

Bublatzky, F., Allen, P. and Riemer, M., 2023. Spatial navigation under threat: aversive apprehensions improve route retracing in higher versus lower trait anxious individuals. Frontiers in Psychology, 14, 1166594.

Full text available as:

[img]
Preview
PDF (OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE)
fpsyg-14-1166594.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

907kB

DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1166594

Abstract

Spatial navigation is a basic function for survival, and the ability to retrace a route has direct relevance for avoiding dangerous places. This study investigates the effects of aversive apprehensions on spatial navigation in a virtual urban environment. Healthy participants with varying degrees of trait anxiety performed a route-repetition and a route-retracing task under threatening and safe context conditions. Results reveal an interaction between the effect of threatening/safe environments and trait anxiety: while threat impairs route-retracing in lower-anxious individuals, this navigational skill is boosted in higher-anxious individuals. According to attentional control theory, this finding can be explained by an attentional shift toward information relevant for intuitive coping strategies (i.e., running away), which should be more pronounced in higher-anxious individuals. On a broader scale, our results demonstrate an often-neglected advantage of trait anxiety, namely that it promotes the processing of environmental information relevant for coping strategies and thus prepares the organism for adequate flight responses.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:1664-1078
Additional Information:1664-1078 Bublatzky, Florian Allen, Peter Riemer, Martin Journal Article Switzerland Front Psychol. 2023 May 11;14:1166594. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1166594. eCollection 2023. Spatial navigation is a basic function for survival, and the ability to retrace a route has direct relevance for avoiding dangerous places. This study investigates the effects of aversive apprehensions on spatial navigation in a virtual urban environment. Healthy participants with varying degrees of trait anxiety performed a route-repetition and a route-retracing task under threatening and safe context conditions. Results reveal an interaction between the effect of threatening/safe environments and trait anxiety: while threat impairs route-retracing in lower-anxious individuals, this navigational skill is boosted in higher-anxious individuals. According to attentional control theory, this finding can be explained by an attentional shift toward information relevant for intuitive coping strategies (i.e., running away), which should be more pronounced in higher-anxious individuals. On a broader scale, our results demonstrate an often-neglected advantage of trait anxiety, namely that it promotes the processing of environmental information relevant for coping strategies and thus prepares the organism for adequate flight responses.
Uncontrolled Keywords:spatial navigation; route retracing; social learning; threat-of-shock; trait anxiety
Group:Faculty of Science & Technology
ID Code:38664
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:07 Jun 2023 16:00
Last Modified:07 Jun 2023 16:00

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

More statistics for this item...
Repository Staff Only -