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The role of consciousness in attentional control differences in trait anxiety
Authors:Nick Berggren  Nazanin Derakshan
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychological Sciences , Birkbeck University of London , London , UK nbergg01@mail.bbk.ac.uk;3. Department of Psychological Sciences , Birkbeck University of London , London , UK;4. St John's College Research Centre, St John's College, University of Oxford , UK
Abstract:Trait anxiety has long been associated with impaired selective attention to task-irrelevant threat stimuli, both when threat is presented consciously and outside of awareness. However recent research has suggested broader deficits in selective attention, with poorer ability to ignore supraliminal non-emotional information in anxiety. Here, we investigated whether anxiety could equally be associated with poorer selective attention for non-emotional stimuli in a subliminal context. Participants performed a simple arrow discrimination task, where prior incompatible or compatible response primes were presented before targets either unmasked (supraliminal) or masked (subliminal). While distractor interference was evident in both conditions, trait anxiety was associated with increased task-irrelevant processing only in the supraliminal condition; group effects were eliminated when primes were masked. Our findings are in line with traditional accounts suggesting that differences in selective attention and cognitive control solely modulate conscious distractor processing.
Keywords:Anxiety  Attentional control theory  Unconscious processing  Response priming
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