Effect of attention control on sustained attention during induced anxiety. Grillon, C., Robinson, O. J., Mathur, A., & Ernst, M. Cognition & emotion, 30(4):700–712, 2016. Place: England
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Anxiety has wide-reaching and complex effects on cognitive performance. Although it can intrude on cognition and interfere with performance, it can also facilitate information processing and behavioural responses. In a previous study, we showed that anxiety induced by threat of shock facilitates performance on the Sustained Attention to Response Task, a vigilance test, which probes response inhibition to infrequent nogo stimuli. The present study sought to identify factors that may have contributed to such improved performance, including on- and off-task thinking (assessed with thought probes) and individual differences in attention control, as measured with the Attention Control Scale. Replicating our prior finding, we showed that shock threat significantly reduced errors of commission on the nogo trials. However, we extended this finding in demonstrating that this effect was driven by subjects with low attention control. We therefore confirm that anxiety increases inhibitory control of prepotent responses–a mechanism which is adaptive under threat–and show that this effect is greater in those who rely more upon such prepotent responding, i.e., those with low attentional control.
@article{grillon_effect_2016,
	title = {Effect of attention control on sustained attention during induced anxiety.},
	volume = {30},
	copyright = {All rights reserved},
	issn = {1464-0600 0269-9931},
	doi = {10.1080/02699931.2015.1024614},
	abstract = {Anxiety has wide-reaching and complex effects on cognitive performance. Although it can intrude on cognition and interfere with performance, it can also  facilitate information processing and behavioural responses. In a previous study,  we showed that anxiety induced by threat of shock facilitates performance on the  Sustained Attention to Response Task, a vigilance test, which probes response  inhibition to infrequent nogo stimuli. The present study sought to identify  factors that may have contributed to such improved performance, including on- and  off-task thinking (assessed with thought probes) and individual differences in  attention control, as measured with the Attention Control Scale. Replicating our  prior finding, we showed that shock threat significantly reduced errors of  commission on the nogo trials. However, we extended this finding in demonstrating  that this effect was driven by subjects with low attention control. We therefore  confirm that anxiety increases inhibitory control of prepotent responses--a  mechanism which is adaptive under threat--and show that this effect is greater in  those who rely more upon such prepotent responding, i.e., those with low  attentional control.},
	language = {eng},
	number = {4},
	journal = {Cognition \& emotion},
	author = {Grillon, Christian and Robinson, Oliver J. and Mathur, Ambika and Ernst, Monique},
	year = {2016},
	pmid = {25899613},
	pmcid = {PMC4618278},
	note = {Place: England},
	keywords = {*Attention, Anxiety, Anxiety/*psychology, Fear, Psychomotor Performance, Reflex, Reflex, Startle, SART, Startle, Stress, Threat of shock, Vigilance},
	pages = {700--712},
}

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