Aix Marseille University, CNRS, AMSE, Marseille, 5-9 Boulevard Maurice Bourdet, 13001, Marseille, France.
Sci Rep. 2024 Jan 12;14(1):1204. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-50036-0.
Worrisome topics, such as climate change, economic crises, or pandemics including Covid-19, are increasingly present and pervasive due to digital media and social networks. Do worries triggered by such topics affect the cognitive capacities of young adults? In an online experiment during the Covid-19 pandemic (N=1503), we test how the cognitive performance of university students responds when exposed to topics discussing (i) current adverse mental health consequences of social restrictions or (ii) future labor market hardships linked to the economic contraction. Moreover, we study how such a response is affected by a performance goal. We find that the labor market topic increases cognitive performance when it is motivated by a goal, consistent with a 'tunneling effect' of scarcity or a positive stress effect. However, we show that the positive reaction is mainly concentrated among students with larger financial and social resources, pointing to an inequality-widening mechanism. Conversely, we find limited support for a negative stress effect or a 'cognitive load effect' of scarcity, as the mental health topic has a negative but insignificant average effect on cognitive performance. Yet, there is a negative response among psychologically vulnerable individuals when the payout is not conditioned on reaching a goal.
令人担忧的话题,如气候变化、经济危机或包括新冠疫情在内的大流行病,由于数字媒体和社交网络的出现而变得越来越普遍。这些话题引发的担忧是否会影响年轻人的认知能力?在新冠疫情期间的一项在线实验中(N=1503),我们测试了当大学生接触到讨论(i)社交限制对当前心理健康的不利影响,或(ii)与经济收缩相关的未来劳动力市场困难的话题时,他们的认知表现会如何反应。此外,我们还研究了这种反应如何受到绩效目标的影响。我们发现,劳动力市场话题在受到目标激励时会提高认知表现,这与稀缺性的“隧道效应”或积极压力效应一致。然而,我们表明,这种积极反应主要集中在财务和社会资源较大的学生中,指向一种扩大不平等的机制。相反,我们发现稀缺性的负面压力效应或“认知负荷效应”的证据有限,因为心理健康话题对认知表现的平均影响是负面但不显著的。然而,当收益不取决于达到目标时,心理脆弱的个体就会产生负面反应。