Psychology, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND 58108-6050, USA.
Cogn Emot. 2011 Feb;25(2):244-64. doi: 10.1080/02699931.2010.486941.
Five studies (N=361) sought to model a class of errors--namely, those in routine tasks--that several literatures have suggested may predispose individuals to higher levels of emotional distress. Individual differences in error frequency were assessed in choice reaction-time tasks of a routine cognitive type. In Study 1, it was found that tendencies toward error in such tasks exhibit trait-like stability over time. In Study 3, it was found that tendencies toward error exhibit trait-like consistency across different tasks. Higher error frequency, in turn, predicted higher levels of negative affect, general distress symptoms, displayed levels of negative emotion during an interview, and momentary experiences of negative emotion in daily life (Studies 2-5). In all cases, such predictive relations remained significant with individual differences in neuroticism controlled. The results thus converge on the idea that error frequency in simple cognitive tasks is a significant and consequential predictor of emotional distress in everyday life. The results are novel, but discussed within the context of the wider literatures that informed them.
五项研究(N=361)旨在建立一个错误模型,即一些文献认为可能导致个体产生更高水平情绪困扰的那些错误。通过常规认知类型的选择反应时间任务来评估个体在错误频率上的差异。在研究 1 中,发现此类任务中的错误倾向随着时间表现出类似特质的稳定性。在研究 3 中,发现错误倾向在不同任务中表现出类似特质的一致性。更高的错误频率,反过来又预示着更高水平的负面情绪、一般困扰症状、在面试中表现出的负面情绪水平,以及日常生活中的负面情绪瞬间体验(研究 2-5)。在所有情况下,在控制神经质个体差异的情况下,这些预测关系仍然显著。因此,这些结果得出了一个结论,即在简单认知任务中的错误频率是日常生活中情绪困扰的一个重要且有影响的预测指标。这些结果是新颖的,但在为其提供信息的更广泛文献背景下进行了讨论。