# Anxiety-Related Modulation of Early Neural Responses to Task-Irrelevant Emotional Faces

**Authors:** Eligiusz Wronka

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/brainsci16010026 · Brain Sciences · 2025-12-25

## TL;DR

High anxiety affects early brain responses to emotional faces, suggesting anxious individuals process threat-related stimuli differently from the start.

## Contribution

The study shows anxiety modulates early neural processing of emotional faces, specifically the P1 ERP component.

## Key findings

- High-anxious individuals showed differences in early P1 ERP component at parieto-occipital sites.
- The Face Inversion Effect was observed with longer latencies and greater amplitudes in early ERP components.
- Anxiety-related differences occurred in initial processing, not later stages like the N170 component.

## Abstract

Objectives: The purpose of the study was to test the hypothesis that high anxiety is associated with biased processing of threat-related stimuli and that anxious individuals may be particularly sensitive to facial expressions of fear or anger. In addition, these effects may result from a specific pattern occurring in the early stages of visual information processing. Methods: Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) were recorded in response to task-irrelevant pictures of faces presented in either an upright or inverted position in two groups differing in trait anxiety, as assessed by scores on the Spielberger Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). Behavioural responses and ERP activity were also recorded in response to simple neutral visual stimuli presented during exposure to the facial stimuli, which served as probe-targets. Results: A typical Face Inversion Effect was observed, characterised by longer latencies and greater amplitudes of the early P1 and N170 ERP components. Differences between low- and high-anxious individuals emerged at parieto-occipital sites within the time window of the early P1 component. The later stage of face processing, indexed by the N170 component, was not affected by the level of trait anxiety. Conclusions: The results of this experiment indicate that anxiety level modulates the initial stages of information processing, as reflected in the P1 component. This may be associated with anxiety-related differences in the involuntary processing of face detection of emotional expression. Consequently, a greater attentional engagement appears to occur in highly anxious individuals, leading to delayed behavioural responses to concurrently presented neutral stimuli.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Anxiety (MESH:D001007)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

66 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12839380/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12839380