Implicit Emotional Biases in Anxiety and Depression: A Fast Periodic Visual Stimulation Study
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Anxiety and depression are among the leading global causes of disability, yet their underlying neural mechanisms remain poorly understood. Traditional event-related potential (ERP) studies have shown attentional biases in anxiety and blunted responses to positive stimuli in depression, but limitations in sensitivity and interpretability hinder their clinical application. Fast Periodic Visual Stimulation (FPVS) offers an objective, high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) approach to measuring neural responses to emotional stimuli. In this study, we applied FPVS with affective images to assess differences in emotional processing between individuals with anxiety and healthy controls across two experimental phases, optimizing stimulus presentation parameters. The results revealed that individuals with anxiety exhibited increased neural responses to negative stimuli compared to positive stimuli, as well as reduced responses to high-arousal stimuli, particularly in occipito-temporal and central-parietal regions. Additionally, individuals with comorbid depression showed blunted responses to high-arousal stimuli across multiple brain regions, consistent with reduced emotional reactivity. These findings support the feasibility of FPVS as a rapid and reliable tool for assessing emotional processing differences in clinical populations, with potential applications in translational research and psychiatric screening