Institute of Neuroscience, National Yang-Ming University , Taipei, Taiwan ; Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, National Central University , Jhongli, Taiwan.
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, National Central University , Jhongli, Taiwan.
Front Psychol. 2015 Jan 20;6:4. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00004. eCollection 2015.
The psychological effect of being watched by others has been proven a powerful tool in modulating social behaviors (e.g., charitable giving) and altering cognitive performance (e.g., visual search). Here we tested whether such awareness would affect one of the core elements of human cognition: emotional processing and impulse control. Using an emotion stop-signal paradigm, we found that viewing emotionally-arousing erotic images before attempting to inhibit a motor response impaired participants' inhibition ability, but such an impairing effect was completely eliminated when participants were led to believe that their facial expressions were monitored by a webcam. Furthermore, there was no post-error slowing in any of the conditions, thus these results cannot be explained by a deliberate speed-accuracy tradeoff or other types of conscious shift in strategy. Together, these findings demonstrate that the interaction between emotional arousal and impulse control can be dependent on one's state of self-consciousness. Furthermore, this study also highlights the effect that the mere presence of the experimenter may have on participants' cognitive performance, even if it's only a webcam.
被他人注视的心理效应已被证明是调节社会行为(如慈善捐赠)和改变认知表现(如视觉搜索)的有力工具。在这里,我们测试了这种意识是否会影响人类认知的核心要素之一:情绪处理和冲动控制。使用情绪停止信号范式,我们发现,在试图抑制运动反应之前观看引起情绪的色情图像会损害参与者的抑制能力,但当参与者被告知他们的面部表情被网络摄像头监控时,这种损害效应完全消除。此外,在任何情况下都没有错误后减速,因此这些结果不能用故意的速度-准确性权衡或其他类型的有意识策略转变来解释。总之,这些发现表明,情绪唤醒和冲动控制之间的相互作用可能取决于个体的自我意识状态。此外,这项研究还强调了即使只是网络摄像头,实验者的存在也可能对参与者的认知表现产生影响。