Shields Grant S, Moons Wesley G, Tewell Carl A, Yonelinas Andrew P
Department of Psychology.
Moons Analytics.
Emotion. 2016 Sep;16(6):792-7. doi: 10.1037/emo0000151. Epub 2016 Apr 21.
It is often assumed that negative affect impairs the executive functions that underlie our ability to control and focus our thoughts. However, support for this claim has been mixed. Recent work has suggested that different negative affective states like anxiety and anger may reflect physiologically separable states with distinct effects on cognition. However, the effects of these 2 affective states on executive function have never been assessed. As such, we induced anxiety or anger in participants and examined the effects on executive function. We found that anger did not impair executive function relative to a neutral mood, whereas anxiety did. In addition, self-reports of induced anxiety, but not anger, predicted impairments in executive function. These results support functional models of affect and cognition, and highlight the need to consider differences between anxiety and anger when investigating the influence of negative affect on fundamental cognitive processes such as memory and executive function. (PsycINFO Database Record
人们常常认为,消极情绪会损害那些构成我们控制和集中思想能力基础的执行功能。然而,对这一说法的支持情况不一。最近的研究表明,不同的消极情绪状态,如焦虑和愤怒,可能反映出生理上可分离的状态,对认知有不同的影响。然而,这两种情绪状态对执行功能的影响从未被评估过。因此,我们在参与者中诱发焦虑或愤怒,并研究其对执行功能的影响。我们发现,与中性情绪相比,愤怒并没有损害执行功能,而焦虑则有。此外,诱发焦虑而非愤怒的自我报告预测了执行功能的受损情况。这些结果支持了情感和认知的功能模型,并强调在研究消极情绪对记忆和执行功能等基本认知过程的影响时,需要考虑焦虑和愤怒之间的差异。(PsycINFO数据库记录)