“…Fox et al (2001) showed that in contexts where the location of an upcoming visual target is largely predictable by a face-cue, it takes these individuals more time to re-orient attentional focus on (a minority of) trials where cues provided incorrect spatial information, but only for face-cues with an angry, but not neutral or happy, expression. While some researchers (e.g., Rudaizky, Basanovic, & MacLeod, 2014) suggest that impaired attentional disengagement from and enhanced attentional engagement to threat-related stimuli might have been jointly responsible for the described results, such findings nevertheless provide converging evidence for an attentional bias towards threatening information in anxious individuals. Similarly, trait-anxiety (TA) is associated with preferential encoding of threatening stimuli into memory without an intention to do so ("implicit-memory bias"; Mathews & MacLeod, 2005): Anxious individuals show better memory for task-irrelevant threat-related words presented during a lexical (but not a semantic) task (Russo, Fox, Lynn, & Nguyen-Van-Tam, 2001), and for task-irrelevant fearful faces in a face-identity recognition task (Stout, Shackman, & Larson, 2013).…”