Attentional reconfiguration during acute and sustained fear

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Fear is a fundamental survival mechanism that both enhances the chances of survival by rapid detection and adaptive responses to potential threat and by optimizing sensory input and cognitive processing. Here we used naturalistic design with eye tracking to map the spatiotemporal dynamics of attention and arousal during fearful events with slow and fast temporal dynamics.

METHODS

21 participants watched a full-length horror movie while their eye-movements were recoded with eye tracker. Moment-to-moment intensity of sustained fear as well as the onsets of the jump scares (acute fear) were annotated and used to predict gaze parameters (fixation duration & counts, blink frequency, saccade amplitude, pupil size and intersubject synchronization of gaze position).

RESULTS

Acute fear events led to shortening of fixation duration, suppression of blinking, as well as increase of fixation count, saccade amplitude, and pupil size. Sustained fear was in turn associated with increased pupil size and decrease in blinking and saccade amplitude. These effects remained significant when controlling for luminosity.

CONCLUSIONS

During natural vision both acute and sustained fear cause rapid reconfiguration, state dependent and individual changes in visual attention prioritizing that is accompanied by increased affective arousal.

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