Department of Psychology, The University of Western Ontario, Social Science Centre, Room 7418, 1151 Richmond St, London, Ontario, Canada.
Psychol Sci. 2010 Dec;21(12):1770-6. doi: 10.1177/0956797610387441. Epub 2010 Oct 25.
Theories of mood and its effect on cognitive processing suggest that positive mood may allow for increased cognitive flexibility. This increased flexibility is associated with the prefrontal cortex and the anterior cingulate cortex, both of which play crucial roles in hypothesis testing and rule selection. Thus, cognitive tasks that rely on behaviors such as hypothesis testing and rule selection may benefit from positive mood, whereas tasks that do not rely on such behaviors should not be affected by positive mood. We explored this idea within a category-learning framework. Positive, neutral, and negative moods were induced in our subjects, and they learned either a rule-described or a non-rule-described category set. Subjects in the positive-mood condition performed better than subjects in the neutral- or negative-mood conditions in classifying stimuli from rule-described categories. Positive mood also affected the strategy of subjects who classified stimuli from non-rule-described categories.
情绪及其对认知加工的影响理论表明,积极的情绪可能会增加认知灵活性。这种灵活性的增加与前额叶皮层和前扣带皮层有关,它们在假设检验和规则选择中都起着至关重要的作用。因此,依赖于假设检验和规则选择等行为的认知任务可能会受益于积极的情绪,而不依赖于此类行为的任务则不应受到积极情绪的影响。我们在类别学习框架内探讨了这个想法。在我们的实验中,诱导被试产生积极、中性和消极情绪,并让他们学习规则描述或非规则描述的类别集。在对规则描述类别的刺激进行分类时,处于积极情绪状态的被试的表现优于处于中性或消极情绪状态的被试。积极的情绪也影响了对非规则描述类别刺激进行分类的被试的策略。