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Spider stimuli improve response inhibition
Affiliation:1. Kent Business School, University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent CT2 7PE, UK;2. Salford Business School, Salford University, Salford M5 4WT, UK;1. Trier University, Germany;2. Leiden University, Netherlands
Abstract:Anxiety can have positive effects on some aspects of cognition and negative effects on others. The current study investigated whether task-relevant anxiety could improve people’s ability to withhold responses in a response inhibition task. Sixty-seven university students completed a modified and an unmodified version of the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART; Robertson, Manly, Andrade, Baddeley, & Yiend, 1997) and provided subjective measures of arousal and thoughts. Anxiety appeared to improve participants’ ability to withhold responses. Further, participants’ performance was consistent with a motor response inhibition perspective rather than a mind-wandering perspective of SART commission error performance. Errors of commission were associated with response times (speed-accuracy trade-off) as opposed to task-unrelated thoughts. Task-related thoughts were associated with the speed-accuracy trade-off. Conversely task-unrelated thoughts showed an association with errors of omission, suggesting this SART metric could be an indicator of sustained attention. Further investigation of the role of thoughts in the SART is warranted.
Keywords:Anxiety  Motor control  Motor decoupling  Response inhibition  SART  Speed-accuracy trade-off  Subjective state  Sustained attention  Task-related thought  Task-unrelated thought
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