“…Like many patients with anxiety disorders, adults, adolescents, and children with a more negative disposition are biased to allocate excess attention to threat-related cues, even when they are irrelevant to the task at hand (Aue & Okon-Singer, 2015; Bar-Haim, Lamy, Pergamin, Bakermans-Kranenburg, & van IJzendoorn, 2007; Cole, Zapp, Fettig, & Perez-Edgar, 2016; Dudeney, Sharpe, & Hunt, 2015; LoBue & Perez-Edgar, 2014; Van Bockstaele et al, 2014) (for thoughtful discussions of heterogeneity, see Naim et al, 2015; Roy, Dennis, & Warner, 2015; Waters et al, 2015) 2 . In particular, recent meta-analyses indicate that children and adolescents with elevated levels of dispositional negativity or frank anxiety disorders show a significantly greater attentional bias for threat-related stimuli when compared to typical youth ( k = 44 studies; mean Cohen’s d = 0.21) or when compared emotionally neutral stimuli (k = 16 studies; mean Cohen’s d = 0.54; Dudeney et al, 2015).…”