“…First, prominent models of attentional systems postulate that attention control is a multifaceted construct (e.g., Petersen & Posner, 2012; Posner & Rothbart, 2007), including at least three distinct attentional networks: alerting (i.e., maintenance of alertness), orienting (i.e., selective engagement and disengagement with certain stimuli rather than others), and an executive component (i.e., top-down control of attention exemplified by maintenance of attention on certain stimuli and resisting distraction by other stimuli). However, although some research have suggested that the three attentional networks might be distinctively associated with processes assumedly involved in the maintenance of anxiety and related psychopathology (e.g., Heeren, Maurage, & Philippot, 2015; Heeren & McNally, 2016), prior research in the field of attentional bias for threat have almost exclusively treated attention control as a unitary construct and did not differentiate the attentional networks (for a discussion, see Heeren, Billieux, Philippot, & Maurage, 2015). Second, although previous research has suggested that PFC-related areas might be considered as proxy of attention control, there is no study directly testing whether attention control improvement does indeed mediate the impact of PFC-modulation on attentional bias for threat.…”