Although there are indications that parental anxiety is related to the development of anxiety among children, direct evidence for the specific mechanisms that underlie the parent-child transmission...Show moreAlthough there are indications that parental anxiety is related to the development of anxiety among children, direct evidence for the specific mechanisms that underlie the parent-child transmission of anxiety is limited. The interaction between anxious parents and their infant is a potentially important mechanism for the transmission of fear from the parent to the infant. This study aims to investigate the relationship between parental anxiety (mothers and fathers) and infants’ attention bias towards fearful faces (vs. happy faces). Both mothers (N = 155) and fathers (N = 74) were included in the study and parental anxiety was measured with the DASS questionnaire. Attention bias towards fearful faces (vs. happy faces) was measured with an eye-tracker in infants between 5 and 19 months old (N = 220; 112 girls, 108 boys). Results show that infants looked longer at fearful faces than at happy faces. However, no relation between parental anxiety and infants’ attention bias towards fearful faces was found. Moreover, the gender of the parent did not influence the relationship between parental anxiety and an infant’s attention bias. The findings do not support the notion that attention bias in infants is a mechanism that could explain the transmission of anxiety from parents to their children. Our study contributes to the literature about the transmission of anxiety from parents to their children and the role of infants’ attention bias in this transmission.Show less