If You Have Anxiety, You Perceive the World Differently from Those Without

Patients may overgeneralize their responses to stimuli, researchers find.

Written byWeizmann Institute of Science
| 2 min read
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People suffering from anxiety perceive the world in a fundamentally different way than others, according to a study reported in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on March 3. The research may help explain why certain people are more prone to anxiety.

The new study shows that people diagnosed with anxiety are less able to distinguish between a neutral, “safe” stimulus (in this case, the sound of a tone) and one that had earlier been associated with gaining or losing money. In other words, when it comes to emotionally-charged experiences, they show a behavioral phenomenon known as “over-generalization,” the researchers say.

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