Literacy: Many studies have been showing that anxious individuals display attention biases including preferential engagement, difficulty in disengagement, or attention avoidance. Research in patients suggests that pathological anxiety may specifically impair spatial short-term and long- term episodic memory. Recently, many authors have emphasized the role of aversive stimulation on attention, working memory and anxiety. Purpose: The present study investigated the influence of anxiety on memory and attention, to contribute to our understanding of the anxiety effects on cognitive function. Methods: 130 students were included in this study (57 male and 73 female). Procedure: Each subject completed the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). After this measure, only 41 participants with the highest (n=21) and the lowest (n=20) levels of anxiety complete the Trail Making Test A-B, Attentive Matrices Test, Babcock Story Recall Test and Short-Term Visual Memory Test. Results: Less anxious participants showed best memory capacity and less attention biases than more anxious participants.

The influence of emotive visual stimulation and anxiety on attention biases and memory

FABIO, Rosa Angela;FALZONE, Alessandra;PENNISI, Antonio
2015-01-01

Abstract

Literacy: Many studies have been showing that anxious individuals display attention biases including preferential engagement, difficulty in disengagement, or attention avoidance. Research in patients suggests that pathological anxiety may specifically impair spatial short-term and long- term episodic memory. Recently, many authors have emphasized the role of aversive stimulation on attention, working memory and anxiety. Purpose: The present study investigated the influence of anxiety on memory and attention, to contribute to our understanding of the anxiety effects on cognitive function. Methods: 130 students were included in this study (57 male and 73 female). Procedure: Each subject completed the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). After this measure, only 41 participants with the highest (n=21) and the lowest (n=20) levels of anxiety complete the Trail Making Test A-B, Attentive Matrices Test, Babcock Story Recall Test and Short-Term Visual Memory Test. Results: Less anxious participants showed best memory capacity and less attention biases than more anxious participants.
2015
Inglese
EAPCogSci 2015 EuroAsianPacific Joint Conference on Cognitive Science
Gabriella Airenti; Bruno G. Bara; Giulio Sandini; Marco Cruciani
CEUR WS
Aachen
GERMANIA
ELETTRONICO
no
Volume 14
593
598
6
EuroAsianPacific Joint Conference on Cognitive Science
Turin
September 25-27th, 2015
Internazionale
no
Esperti anonimi
anxiety; attention; emotive stimulation; memory.
no
Fabio, Rosa Angela; Daniela, Palato; Antonino, Errante; Falzone, Alessandra; Pennisi, Antonio
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
none
5
274
14.d Contributo in Atti di Convegno::14.d.1 Abstract in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11570/3087149
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